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      Political ecologies of health

      Progress in Human Geography
      SAGE Publications

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          Gender differences in health: are things really as simple as they seem?

          It is conventional wisdom in medical sociology and social epidemiology that in industrialized societies men die earlier than women, but that women have poorer health than men. A number of explanations for these differences have been postulated and tested (for example, different biological risks, acquired risks, reporting biases and experiences of health care). Using two recent British data sets we find that the pattern of sex differences in morbidity is more complicated than the conventional wisdom often suggests. The direction and magnitude of sex differences in health vary according to the particular symptom or condition in question and according to the phase of the life cycle. Female excess is only consistently found across the life span for psychological distress and is far less apparent, or reversed, for a number of physical symptoms and conditions. Detailed inspection of papers on gender differences published in the last decade reveals that our findings are not unique, but that a relatively undifferentiated model of consistent sex differences has nevertheless continued to predominate in the literature. We believe that the topic of gender differences in health warrants periodic re-examination.
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            Famine and household coping strategies

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              Therapeutic landscapes: medical issues in light of the new cultural geography.

              W Gesler (1992)
              Employing an expanded meaning of the concept of landscape taken from the 'new' cultural geography, this paper explores why certain places or situations are perceived to be therapeutic. Themes from both traditional and recent work in cultural geography are illustrated with examples from the literature of the social science of health care. The themes include man-environment relationships; humanist concepts such as sense of place and symbolic landscapes; structuralist concepts such as hegemony and territoriality; and blends of humanist concerns, structuralist concerns, and time geography. The intention of this broad overview is to bring some particularly useful concepts developed in cultural geography to the attention of social scientists interested in matters of health and to stimulate research along new lines.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Progress in Human Geography
                Progress in Human Geography
                SAGE Publications
                0309-1325
                1477-0288
                January 26 2010
                July 08 2009
                : 34
                : 1
                : 38-55
                Article
                10.1177/0309132509338642
                fb63fdcb-2df3-49a9-ab9a-05941cf63628
                © 2009

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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