Front cover image for Unhealthy health policy : a critical anthropological examination

Unhealthy health policy : a critical anthropological examination

Reveals the social inequalities that often represent significant threats to the health and well being of the poor, ethnic minorities, and women. This book defines an anthropology of policy concerned with decision-making and the impact of health policy on human lives. It is of interest to researchers and practitioners in medical anthropology.
Print Book, English, 2004
Altamira Press, Lanham, 2004
Economia. Sottosviluppo e sviluppo socio-economico Saggi, varia
xx, 387 pagine ; 23 cm
9780759105119, 0759105111
1203753610
Chapter 1 Introduction. Anthropology and Health Policy: A Critical Perspective Part 2 PART I. International Institutions and the Setting of Health Policies Chapter 3 1. Pearls of the Antilles? Public Health in Haiti and Cuba Chapter 4 2. The Visible Fist of the Market: Health Reforms in Latin America Chapter 5 3. International NGOs in the Mozambique Health Sector: The Velvet Glove of Privatization Chapter 6 4. Primary Health Care since Alma Ata: Lost in the Bretton Woods? Chapter 7 5. Shifting Policies Towards Traditional Midwives: Implications for Reproductive Health Care in Pakistan Chapter 8 6. The Contradictions of a Revolving Drug Fund in Post-Soviet Tajikistan: Selling Medicines to Starving Patients Chapter 9 7. Equity in Access to AIDS Treatment in Africa: Pitfalls amongst Achievements Chapter 10 8. Contracepting at Childbirth: The Integration of Reproductive Health and Population Policies in Mexico Chapter 11 9. How Healthy are Health and Population Policies? The Indian Experience Part 12 PART II. National Health Policies and Social Exclusion Chapter 13 10. Happy Children with AIDS: The Paradox of a Healthy National Program in an Unequal and Exclusionary Brazil Chapter 14 11. Between Risk and Confession: The Popularization of Syphilis Prophylaxis in Revolutionary Mexico Chapter 15 12. Saving Lives, Destroying Livelihoods: Emergency Evacuation and Resettlement Policies in Ecuador Chapter 16 13. Social Illegitimacy as a Foundation of Health Inequality: How the Political Treatment of Immigrants Illuminates a French Paradox Chapter 17 14. The Indian Health Transfer Policy in Canada: Toward Self-Determination or Cost Containment? Chapter 18 15. Land and Rural New Mexican Hispanics' Mistrust of Federal Programs: The Unintended Consequences of Medicaid Eligibility Rules Chapter 19 16. The Death and Resurrection of Medicaid Managed Care for Mental Health Services in New Mexico Chapter 20 17. Sugar Blues: A Social Anatomy of the Diabetes Epidemic in the United States Chapter 21 18. Syringe Access, HIV Risk, and AIDS in Massachusetts and Connecticut: The Health Implications of Public Policy Chapter 22 19. Why it is Easier to Get Drugs than Drug Treatment in the United States? Chapter 23 20. U.S. Inner City Apartheid and the War on Drugs: Crack among Homeless Heroin Addicts Chapter 24 PART III. Impact of Policy on the Practice of Medicine Chapter 25 21. United States Health Policy on Alternative Medicine: A Case Study in the Co-optation of a Popular Movement Chapter 26 22. Home Birth Emergencies in the United States: The Trouble with Transport Chapter 27 23. Why Is Prevention Not the Focus for Breast Cancer Policy in the Unites States Rather than High-Tech Medical Solutions? Part 28 Index