A large part of contemporary medicine is concerned with describing and understanding the biological mechanisms involved in disease causation. Comparatively less attention has been paid to the socioeconomic and behavioral mechanisms underlying disease. This article argues for an integration of social, behavioral, and biological factors in the explanation of pathogenesis, a perspective that is in accord with the vision of pioneer public health practitioners of the 19th century, but that has gradually been overtaken by the dominance of the biomedical disease model. In recent decades, the social components of disease have been depicted as “distal” factors or used as “classificatory” devices. We explain how the integration we propose, which draw...
This article describes both sociological and genetic theories of illness causation and derives propo...
The currently dominant model of health and disease in psychiatry and medicine is Engel’s biopsychoso...
Biosocial scientists claim to improve our understanding of health disparities by integrating social ...
It is widely agreed that social factors are related to health outcomes: much research served to esta...
It is widely agreed that social factors are related to health outcomes: much research has served to ...
It is widely agreed that social factors are related to health outcomes: much research served to esta...
An important focus of recent calls for interdisciplinary approaches in health research has been the ...
In a series of recent works, Ian Hacking has produced a model of social causation in mental illness ...
The social and behavioral sciences are at a crossroads in public health. In this paper, we attempt t...
In 2008, the Commission on Social Determinants of Health at the World Health Organisation published ...
In social epidemiology, to speak of theory is simultaneously to speak of society and biology. It is,...
Causation is important when considering: how an organism maintains health; why disease arises in a h...
This open access book is a systematic update of the philosophical and scientific foundations of the ...
Social and biological explanations traditionally have been cast as incompatible, but advances in rec...
The paper deals with two central issues in the philosophy of neuroscience and psychiatry, namely tho...
This article describes both sociological and genetic theories of illness causation and derives propo...
The currently dominant model of health and disease in psychiatry and medicine is Engel’s biopsychoso...
Biosocial scientists claim to improve our understanding of health disparities by integrating social ...
It is widely agreed that social factors are related to health outcomes: much research served to esta...
It is widely agreed that social factors are related to health outcomes: much research has served to ...
It is widely agreed that social factors are related to health outcomes: much research served to esta...
An important focus of recent calls for interdisciplinary approaches in health research has been the ...
In a series of recent works, Ian Hacking has produced a model of social causation in mental illness ...
The social and behavioral sciences are at a crossroads in public health. In this paper, we attempt t...
In 2008, the Commission on Social Determinants of Health at the World Health Organisation published ...
In social epidemiology, to speak of theory is simultaneously to speak of society and biology. It is,...
Causation is important when considering: how an organism maintains health; why disease arises in a h...
This open access book is a systematic update of the philosophical and scientific foundations of the ...
Social and biological explanations traditionally have been cast as incompatible, but advances in rec...
The paper deals with two central issues in the philosophy of neuroscience and psychiatry, namely tho...
This article describes both sociological and genetic theories of illness causation and derives propo...
The currently dominant model of health and disease in psychiatry and medicine is Engel’s biopsychoso...
Biosocial scientists claim to improve our understanding of health disparities by integrating social ...