
From Health Behaviours to Health Practices
Critical Perspectives
Simon Cohn(Editor)
Wiley (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 15. August 2014
Book
Paperback/Softback
168 pages
978-1-118-89839-0 (ISBN)
Description
A wide range of international contributions draw on theoretical and empirical sources to explore whether alternatives exist to both conceptualise and conduct research into what people do and don't do, in relation to their health and experiences of illness.
* Presents a collection of international contributions that complement, as well as critique, dominant conceptualisations of health behaviour
* Includes a wide range of both theoretical perspectives and empirical cases
* Reasserts the unique contribution social sciences can make to health research
* Challenges assumptions about the usefulness of the concept of health behaviour
* A timely publication given the rise of chronic and lifestyle diseases and the resulting changes in global health agendas
More details
Series
Edition
1. Auflage
Language
English
Place of publication
Hoboken
United Kingdom
Publishing group
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 9 mm
Weight
254 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-118-89839-0 (9781118898390)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
07/2014
Wiley-Blackwell
€21.99
Available for download

E-Book
07/2014
Wiley-Blackwell
€21.99
Available for download
Person
Simon Cohn is a Reader in Medical Anthropology at the London School for Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. His research focuses on issues related to diagnosis, contested conditions and chronic illness in the UK and other high-income societies. With a strong commitment to contemporary social theory, Cohn is interested in ways in which innovative social science can shape aspects of medical practice.
Content
Notes on Contributors
From health behaviours to health practices: an introduction (Simon Cohn)
* Actors, patients and agency: a recent history (David Armstrong)
* A socially situated approach to inform ways to improve health and wellbeing (Christine Horrocks and Sally Johnson)
* A relational approach to health practices: towards transcending the agency-structure divide (Gerry Veenstra and Patrick John Burnett)
* Environmental justice and health practices: understanding how health inequities arise at the local level (Katherine L. Frohlich and Thomas Abel)
* Why behavioural health promotion endures despite its failure to reduce health inequities (Fran Baum and Matthew Fisher)
* Behaviour change and social blinkers? The role of sociology in trials of self-management behaviour in chronic conditions (Bie Nio Ong, Anne Rogers, Anne Kennedy, Peter Bower, Tom Sanders, Andrew Morden, Sudeh Cheraghi-Sohi, Jane C. Richardson and Fiona Stevenson)
* Thinking about changing mobility practices: how a social practice approach can help (Sarah Nettleton and Judith Green)
* Providers' constructions of pregnant and early parenting women who use substances (Cecilia Benoit, Camille Stengel, Lenora Marcellus, Helga Hallgrimsdottir, John Anderson, Karen MacKinnon, Rachel Phillips, Pilar Zazueta and Sinead Charbonneau)
* Staying 'in the zone' but not passing the 'point of no return': embodiment, gender and drinking in mid-life (Antonia C. Lyons, Carol Emslie and Kate Hunt)
* Complexities and contingencies conceptualised: towards a model of reproductive navigation (Erica van der Sijpt)
* Sustained multiplicity in everyday cholesterol reduction: repertoires and practices in talk about 'healthy living' (Catherine M. Will and Kate Weiner)
* Enjoy your food: on losing weight and taking pleasure (Else Vogel and Annemarie Mol)
Index