Applying health social science : best practice in the developing world /
edited by Nick Higginbotham, Roberto Briceno-Leon, and Nancy A. Johnson.
- London ; New York : Zed Books in association with International Forum for Social Sciences in Health, 2001.
- xi, 291 p. ; 22 cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Applying social science to improve human health. Health social science: transdisciplinary partnerships for improving human health. Asia and the Pacific. An indigenous work-related social skills training model for persons with schizophrenia in Hong Kong -- Cultural constructions of risk: heart disease in the New South Wales Coalfields, Australia -- The development of a transdisciplinary approach to promote the rational use of drugs: the Indonesian experience -- A community approach to smoking cessation and relapse prevention in a traditional Fijian village. Africa. A community-action intervention to improve medical care services in Kinshasa, Congo: mediating the realms of healers and physicians -- Representing HIV/AIDS concerns in Uganda: the genogram as a visual complement to ethnographic and epidemiological evidence -- AIDS prevention in the Matare and the community: a training strategy for traditional healers in Zimbabwe. Latin America. Lay beliefs and gender stereotypes: unacknowledged dimensions of STD prevention strategies -- From "milk bread" to control of visceral leishmaniasis among the ZenĂș Indians of the Caribbean Coast of Colombia -- Mud, bugs and community participation: remodelling village houses to eradicate vector-borne disease. Lessons and directions. Best practice and future innovations in applying social science to advancing the health of populations.
1842770500 1842770519
Medical care--Research--Developing countries--Case studies Social sciences--Research--Developing countries--Case studies Public health--Research--Developing countries--Case studies Social Medicine Behavioral Medicine Developing Countries Public Health