Chapter.14 Health And Illness Full Test Bank 7th Edition - The Real World Sociology 7e Test Bank by Kerry Ferris. DOCX document preview.

Chapter.14 Health And Illness Full Test Bank 7th Edition

Chapter 14 Health and Illness

MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. Good health is

a.

only important to Western societies.

b.

biologically determined.

c.

culturally relative.

d.

consistent around the world.

DIF: Moderate

REF: 14.1 The Sociology of Medicine, Health, and Illness MSC: Understanding

2. What do sociologists ask you to consider regarding health and illness?

a.

how biomedical models are superior to other explanations

b.

the physical roots of health and illness

c.

how health and illness are shaped by social factors

d.

similarities throughout the world

DIF: Easy

REF: 14.1 The Sociology of Medicine, Health, and Illness MSC: Understanding

3. In the United States, we value slim, athletic builds and consider people with these body types to be healthier than people with more fleshy builds. But in Dakar, Senegal, people tend to value body types that in the United States would be considered clinically overweight. Senegalese women, in particular, associate these body types with both health and wealth: slimmer women actually want to gain weight in order to attain the “desirable,” “healthy,” “well-fed” build. What does this example suggest contributes to our ideal of a healthy body?

a.

biology

b.

genetics

c.

epidemiology

d.

social factors and culture

DIF: Easy

REF: 14.1 The Sociology of Medicine, Health, and Illness | InQuizitive

MSC: Understanding

4. A highly vaccinated community maintains ________, a kind of group resistance that helps protect even the unvaccinated from contracting the disease.

a.

acute immunity

b.

herd immunity

c.

epidemiological resistance

d.

medicalization resistance

DIF: Easy

REF: 14.1 The Sociology of Medicine, Health, and Illness | InQuizitive

MSC: Understanding

5. Dr. Robinson believes that the ongoing Flint water crisis in Michigan is only still a problem because the affected population is mostly black and poor. He believes the slow response of government officials is a result of this population’s lack of economic and political power. With which theoretical viewpoint do Dr. Robinson’s beliefs align?

a.

conflict theory

b.

structural functionalism

c.

symbolic interactionism

d.

modernism

DIF: Difficult

REF: 14.1 The Sociology of Medicine, Health, and Illness | InQuizitive

MSC: Applying

6. Ori got food poisoning at his favorite restaurant and was treated right away. This type of illness would be classified as

a.

palliative.

b.

chronic.

c.

acute.

d.

lifestyle based.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness

MSC: Applying

7. Kea tries to take good care of herself by regularly exercising, getting an appropriate amount of rest, and eating a healthy diet. Her approach to health is MOST closely aligned with

a.

palliative medicine.

b.

chronic illness.

c.

preventive medicine.

d.

lifestyle medicine.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness

MSC: Applying

8. Denise feels horrible, so she visits a doctor. The doctor tells Denise that she has a bad cold and should feel better soon. How would Denise’s illness be classified?

a.

chronic

b.

acute

c.

crisis

d.

preventive

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness

MSC: Applying

9. The Pacific Gas and Electric Company poisoned the water in Hinkley, California. The poisoned water system had sickened many Hinkley, California residents with ailments like liver damage and cancer. How would the illnesses of the Hinkley residents be classified?

a.

crisis diseases

b.

curative diseases

c.

acute diseases

d.

chronic diseases

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness

MSC: Applying

10. What type of diseases come on suddenly and are often contagious?

a.

crisis

b.

acute

c.

curative

d.

preventive

DIF: Easy REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness

MSC: Remembering

11. The most prevalent causes of death in the United States are due to chronic illness, while people in the developing world are continually affected by the threat of acute illnesses. This discrepancy indicates that

a.

illness is a biological event.

b.

palliative care is necessary.

c.

illness is impacted by social factors.

d.

we can prevent deaths in the United States but not in the developing world.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness

MSC: Analyzing

12. ________ is the type of care we are practicing when we focus on making a person comfortable at the end of life.

a.

Palliative

b.

Crisis

c.

Chronic

d.

Preventive

DIF: Easy REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness

MSC: Understanding

13. Researchers often conduct studies on American college students. What is one organization that conducts such research to determine health behaviors as well as develop support programs and services on a wide variety of health-related issues?

a.

World Health Organization

b.

United Nations

c.

Surgeon General’s office

d.

American College Health Association

DIF: Easy REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness

MSC: Remembering

14. More than half of American women gave birth at home in the early 1900s, while around 99 percent of all births take place in hospitals today. This is an example of

a.

chronic care.

b.

medicalization.

c.

palliative care.

d.

the tragedy of the commons.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization

MSC: Understanding

15. A reality television program called The Swan (2004–2005) intended to give women extreme makeovers. This was done by radically changing their appearance, in part through plastic surgery. Of what is this an example?

a.

the medicalization of beauty

b.

the epidemiology of beauty

c.

deprivation amplification

d.

complementary medicine

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization

MSC: Applying

16. Obesity is now often treated with surgery. Weight loss was previously not often considered a medical problem that could be addressed through surgery. This is evidence of

a.

increases in psychiatric approaches to care.

b.

medicalization and the social construction of health and illness.

c.

an approach to an acute condition.

d.

how people today tend to follow television stars’ behavior.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization

MSC: Applying

17. It important to be concerned that approximately 75 percent of patients die in settings like hospitals instead of at home because it

a.

helps researchers find data on the cause of death.

b.

indicates that death is a major life event.

c.

shows how death has been medicalized.

d.

is a sign that more people are dying earlier.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization

MSC: Analyzing

18. As the process of ________ develops, we will be less likely to treat someone who has a mental health issue as having something they should just “deal with” alone. We will instead be more likely to think of the issue as having to do with a disease.

a.

medicalization

b.

acute care

c.

hospitalization

d.

the professionalization of doctors

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization

MSC: Understanding

19. In his film Sicko, Michael Moore brings attention to the difference between the health insurance of the wealthy and that of the poor. What sociological theory treats health insurance as a resource to explain this difference?

a.

socialized medicine theory

b.

structural functionalism

c.

conflict theory

d.

symbolic interactionism

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization

MSC: Applying

20. Siobhan recently learned that he has a mental illness. Since her diagnosis, she has begun to act according to the illness and in ways that she thinks others expect someone with a mental illness to act. Which theory of health and illness best explains her situation?

a.

curative medicine

b.

structural functionalism

c.

conflict theory

d.

symbolic interactionism

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization

MSC: Applying

21. In the ________ approach to addiction, people who become addicted may be responding to strains in the social system and their own lives by escaping through drugs and alcohol.

a.

structural functionalist

b.

conflict theory

c.

symbolic interactionist

d.

sick role

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization

MSC: Applying

22. The ________ approach to addiction suggests that people of lower socioeconomic status are more likely to be scrutinized as problem drinkers or drug addicts.

a.

structural functionalist

b.

conflict theory

c.

symbolic interactionist

d.

sick role

DIF: Easy REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization

MSC: Applying

23. Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) was not recognized by the American Psychiatric Association in the form we now know it until 1987, despite the fact that children exhibited the same symptoms of ADHD before 1987. What sociological concept does this highlight?

a.

epidemic

b.

pandemic

c.

medicalization

d.

cultural competence

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization | InQuizitive

MSC: Applying

24. Which of the following statements highlights the idea that mental illness can be socially constructed?

a.

Mental illness is clearly definable using the latest DSM produced by the American Psychiatric Association.

b.

An individual can determine for themselves if they have a mental illness.

c.

The meanings and definitions of mental illness varies over time and place.

d.

An individual with a mental illness may not show external signs.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization | InQuizitive

MSC: Understanding

25. A/An ________ occurs when the number of cases of a particular disease during a particular time is significantly higher than it might be otherwise.

a.

epidemic

b.

pandemic

c.

epidemiology

d.

distribution issue

DIF: Easy REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Remembering

26. A/An ________ is an epidemic that spans across national borders, across continents, or around the world.

a.

epidemiology

b.

vector organism

c.

deprivation amplification

d.

pandemic

DIF: Easy REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Remembering

27. ________ gather and analyze data on particular illnesses. They are interested in how, where, and to whom the illnesses are spread as well as how to stop their spread.

a.

Sociologists

b.

Psychologists

c.

Epidemiologists

d.

Entomologists

DIF: Easy REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Remembering

28. ________ is the study of the social aspects of diseases.

a.

Eugenics

b.

Physiology

c.

Medicalization

d.

Epidemiology

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Remembering

29. Malaria is a serious health concern in Cambodia. The rate of malaria infection is 40 percent in some villages, especially those surrounded by forests. If you have been asked to research the problem for the World Health Organization due to your extensive professional experience with the study of social disease patterns, you are MOST likely a(n)

a.

psychologist.

b.

politician.

c.

integrative medicine doctor.

d.

epidemiologist.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Applying

30. What are epidemiologists currently studying the role of in the global spread of diseases?

a.

alternative medicine

b.

integrative medicine

c.

cultural competence

d.

climate change

DIF: Easy REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Remembering

31. Research shows that the odds of a patient being diagnosed with autism ________ in the years when the diagnostic criteria of autism changed.

a.

increased

b.

decreased

c.

remained stable

d.

fluctuated

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Remembering

32. In the early twentieth century, unmarried women who had children were considered to be feebleminded or to suffer from mental problems. They were also thought more likely to give birth to children who were also feebleminded. Today, this attitude seems ridiculous. This is an example of

a.

preventative medicine.

b.

epidemiological change.

c.

the social construction of mental illness.

d.

a disease risk being amplified by social factors.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Applying

33. Approximately ________ people have died from having contracted HIV/AIDS since the virus was first identified in the early 1980s.

a.

35,000,000

b.

250,000

c.

3,000,000

d.

100,000,000

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Remembering

34. Why is intravenous drug use responsible for most HIV/AIDS cases in Central Europe and Central Asia, while HIV/AIDS is a general problem spread through the entire population in sub-Saharan Africa?

a.

HIV/AIDS is a different disease depending on where it is.

b.

HIV/AIDS is a different epidemic depending on where it is.

c.

HIV/AIDS is distributed equally throughout the world.

d.

HIV/AIDS spreads differently based on climate.

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Understanding

35. What is HIV/AIDS considered?

a.

an epidemic

b.

a pandemic

c.

a sick role

d.

a rescission

DIF: Easy REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Understanding

36. Epidemiologists are currently studying the role of climate change in the global spread of diseases. They have found that increases in temperature can also increase the numbers of

a.

vector organisms.

b.

food deserts.

c.

chronic diseases.

d.

pathogens.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Remembering

37. Which of the following carry and spread pathogens in geographic locations around the world?

a.

vaccines

b.

vector organisms

c.

bioethics

d.

eugenics

DIF: Easy REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Remembering

38. Epidemiologists predict that rates of certain diseases or viruses may dramatically increase when vector organisms enter new ecosystems due to global climate change. Which of the following have epidemiologists linked to climate change?

a.

diabetes

b.

obesity

c.

malaria

d.

HIV/AIDS

DIF: Easy REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns

MSC: Understanding

39. What disorder does the American Psychiatric Association define as “a complex development disorder that can cause problems with thinking, feeling, language, and the ability to relate to others”?

a.

attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)

b.

autism spectrum disorder (ASD)

c.

obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD)

d.

bipolar disorder

DIF: Easy

REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Disease Patterns | InQuizitive MSC: Remembering

40. Kendra is a lower-class American who lives in public housing, did not finish high school, experiences lapses in employment, and has a hard time paying her bills. Kendra is twice as likely as people who are not living in poverty to

a.

visit a doctor for yearly checkups.

b.

have an above-average life expectancy.

c.

report having good physical well-being.

d.

suffer from depression.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Applying

41. You are an American with a lower socioeconomic status. You are also a racial minority living in public housing and working a physically demanding job to financially support a family of four. It is likely that you

a.

have a number of ailments like arthritis and asthma.

b.

view physical labor as preventative medicine.

c.

report having good physical well-being.

d.

engage in regular good health practices.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Applying

42. Emily Rosenbaum (2008) found that it was more common for ________ to live in substandard housing located in marginalized neighborhoods of New York City.

a.

whites and Asians

b.

Asians and blacks

c.

blacks and Hispanics

d.

Hispanics and whites

DIF: Easy REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Remembering

43. What is there evidence of that make(s) men more sick?

a.

biological factors

b.

traditional male gender role expectations

c.

traditional female gender role expectations

d.

gender inequality

DIF: Easy REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Understanding

44. The more strongly men identify with stereotypical ideas about masculinity, the more likely they are to

a.

come into contact with vector organisms.

b.

have a longer life expectancy than women.

c.

avoid risky lifestyle behaviors (such as smoking, drinking, and driving fast).

d.

avoid preventive health care.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Applying

45. Many health inequities that people of lower socioeconomic status experience are worsened in ________ groups.

a.

older

b.

family

c.

minority

d.

majority

DIF: Easy REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Understanding

46. Mark lives in a densely populated American city and buys groceries from the nearby corner store. The corner store mostly sells food that is canned or frozen and doesn’t have a lot of variety. What can we conclude about Mark?

a.

He lives in a food desert.

b.

He practices alternative medicine.

c.

There is a large grocery store nearby, but he prefers the corner store.

d.

He eats nutritious meals every day.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Applying

47. A/An ________ is a community that has no grocery store, but more liquor, convenience, and fast food outlets than most other residential areas.

a.

social institution

b.

epidemic

c.

pandemic

d.

food desert

DIF: Easy REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Understanding

48. People living in what type of an area have an increased risk of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease?

a.

densely populated urban area

b.

sparsely populated rural area

c.

East Coast city

d.

food desert

DIF: Easy REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Applying

49. ________ occurs when our individual, genetic, and physiological illness and disease risks are worsened by social factors like the neighborhood where we live, inequality, and corporate and governmental policies and practices?

a.

Medicalization

b.

Deprivation amplification

c.

A food desert

d.

Impression management

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Remembering

50. Researchers found that poorer Louisville residents suffered greater rates of illness and died earlier than wealthier ones. Of what is this an example?

a.

deprivation amplification

b.

food deserts

c.

an epidemic

d.

the sick role

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Applying

51. C. Wright Mills used the term “sociological imagination” to refer to important interconnections between personal troubles and public issues. What would he have said about deprivation amplification?

a.

Public issues cause poor health, so work must be done to more properly address disease rates solely at the public level.

b.

Personal troubles cause poor health, so work must be done to more properly address disease rates solely at the personal level.

c.

Both public issues and personal troubles contribute to poor health, so work must be done at both levels to more properly address disease rates.

d.

Neither public issues nor personal troubles contribute to poor health, so work done at these levels would not address disease rates any differently.

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Applying

52. How large is the gap in life expectancy between the richest 1 percent of women and the poorest 1 percent of women?

a.

10 years

b.

5 years

c.

3 years

d.

15 years

DIF: Moderate

REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness | InQuizitive MSC: Remembering

53. Is medicine in the United States a social institution?

a.

Yes, because doctors need licenses to practice.

b.

No, because it is more of an ideal than a social institution.

c.

Yes, because organizations like the American Medical Association set policy and shape definitions of health and illness throughout the nation.

d.

No, because organizations like the American Medical Association are brick-and-mortar places and not really large-scale patterns of interaction.

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Understanding

54. The American Medical Association

a.

creates, maintains, legitimizes, and controls medicine in the United States.

b.

really has had a hands-off approach to medicine, while corporations have had more say.

c.

really has had a hands-off approach to medicine, while the government has had more say.

d.

is a complicated organization with a long history of social policy advocacy around improving health for all Americans regardless of social class, racial or ethnic group, or gender.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Understanding

55. Both classic and more recent studies of hospital experiences have found

a.

that the hospital experience is often dehumanizing, and the power of the institutions to define diagnoses is heavily skewed.

b.

that the hospital experience is usually highly satisfactory to patients and doctors alike.

c.

mixed results, as studies are of varying ages.

d.

mixed results, as different studies used different research methods.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Remembering

56. What have studies of doctor–patient relations found?

a.

In a medical setting, doctors automatically have more status and power.

b.

In the sick role, patients automatically have more status and power.

c.

Doctors and patients interact as equals unless they disagree about the diagnoses.

d.

Status and power vary and are established in the doctor–patient interaction.

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Remembering

57. What is the concept of acknowledging and incorporating a patient’s cultural background as part of the treatment process called?

a.

patient rights

b.

cultural competence

c.

the Association of American Medical Colleges

d.

crisis medicine

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Remembering

58. What did Talcott Parsons research from a structural functionalist perspective?

a.

the medical establishment

b.

cultural competence

c.

the sick role

d.

doctors’ power and status

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Remembering

59. Death and illness in a population are bad for the productivity of the system and are destabilizing forces. Which theory takes this approach to medicine?

a.

structural functionalism

b.

conflict theory

c.

symbolic interactionism

d.

the sick role

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Applying

60. Justin caught the flu and was urged by his employer to take a few days off to recover. However, on the third day of missing work, Justin’s employer sees him at lunch with some friends. His employer approaches him and Justin suggests he’s still very sick and will need a few more days to recover. Justin tells his employer he has not seen a doctor or taken any medicine. Justin is not fulfilling his duties as part of the

a.

doctor–patient relationship.

b.

medicalization of health.

c.

social/medical interactionism.

d.

sick role.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution | InQuizitive

MSC: Applying

61. The Hmong people are an ethnic group native to the mountainous regions of mainland Southeast Asia. What is the traditional Hmong understanding of epileptic seizures?

a.

An evil spirit meddles with the soul.

b.

The body is imitating a nonhuman life form recently touched, such as an animal or a plant.

c.

An excess of life force causes all muscles to be activated at once.

d.

The good and evil elements in the body are at war with each other.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution | InQuizitive

MSC: Understanding

62. The 2010 Affordable Care Act (commonly called “Obamacare”)

a.

allowed insurance companies to deny coverage to anyone with preexisting conditions.

b.

required births to occur in a hospital instead of at home.

c.

included many insurance reforms and aimed to increase the number of Americans receiving health care.

d.

provided universal health care for all citizens by providing each person with state-run insurance.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.7 Issues in Medicine and Health Care

MSC: Remembering

63. ________ is a group of medical treatments, practices, and products that includes practices like acupuncture, homeopathy, hypnosis, and meditation as well as traditional healers like shamans.

a.

The 2010 Health Care Reform Act

b.

Curative medicine

c.

Bioethics

d.

Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM)

DIF: Easy REF: 14.7 Issues in Medicine and Health Care

MSC: Remembering

64. ________ is the study of controversial moral or ethical issues related to scientific and medical advancements.

a.

Curative medicine

b.

Bioethics

c.

Medicalization

d.

Conflict theory

DIF: Easy REF: 14.7 Issues in Medicine and Health Care

MSC: Remembering

65. Rescission refers to

a.

stabilizing the price of health care.

b.

insurance companies canceling a client’s coverage only after the person gets sick.

c.

insurance companies denying health-care coverage due to a preexisting condition.

d.

a client’s inability to pay for health insurance due to economic hardship.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.7 Issues in Medicine and Health Care

MSC: Remembering

66. Which of the following U.S. presidents described comprehensive health-care reform as the highest priority on his unfinished agenda for America?

a.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt

b.

Richard Nixon

c.

George W. Bush

d.

Bill Clinton

DIF: Easy REF: 14.7 Issues in Medicine and Health Care

MSC: Remembering

67. Jordan has been suffering from sinus pain for several months, and his physician prescribes over-the-counter decongestants and acupuncture. This is an example of ________ medicine.

a.

conventional Western

b.

alternative

c.

curative

d.

integrative

DIF: Easy REF: 14.7 Issues in Medicine and Health Care

MSC: Understanding

68. Genetic testing in utero can inform parents of possible genetic mutations in the embryo. There are ethical concerns regarding this type of genetic testing because some individuals believe the selection of only healthy babies is a form of

a.

eugenics.

b.

epidemic.

c.

genocide.

d.

bioethics.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.7 Issues in Medicine and Health Care

MSC: Analyzing

69. ________ is a scientific endeavor that seeks to identify and map the genes that make up human DNA.

a.

Medicalization

b.

The Human Genome Project

c.

Eugenics

d.

The 2010 Health Care Reform Act

DIF: Easy REF: 14.7 Issues in Medicine and Health Care

MSC: Remembering

70. ________ health care makes ill patients more comfortable and prepares them for the end of life.

a.

Integrative

b.

Alternative

c.

Palliative

d.

Comprehensive

DIF: Easy REF: 14.7 Issues in Medicine and Health Care

MSC: Remembering

TRUE/FALSE

1. Acute diseases have a sudden onset, whereas chronic diseases develop over a period of time.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness

MSC: Remembering

2. A pandemic occurs when the number of cases of a disease is much higher than expected, while an epidemic has occurred if a disease has spread across large geographical regions such as national borders.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Patterns of Disease

MSC: Remembering

3. Health and illness are impacted by social class, race, and gender inequality.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Remembering

4. Deprivation amplification involves disease risks being increased or amplified by genetic factors.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Remembering

5. The sick role, which consists of the actions and attitudes expected of ill individuals, is most associated with structural functionalist Robert Merton.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Remembering

6. The Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) has recommended changes regarding cultural competence as well as ways in which these changes can be evaluated.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Remembering

7. In a 2016 study, Tsugawa and colleagues found that elderly patients who were hospitalized had better health outcomes if male doctors rather than female doctors treated them.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Remembering

8. Complementary medicine and alternative medicine are not synonymous and cannot be used interchangeably given they are very different types of medicine.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.7 Issues in Medicine and Health Care

MSC: Remembering

SHORT ANSWER

1. Paolo broke a finger playing soccer and was seen by a medical practitioner soon after the accident. How would his ailment be classified?

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness MSC: Applying

2. What approach to medicine are we using when we take care of a person at the end of their life, consider their quality of life, and ensure their comfort and safety?

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness MSC: Understanding

3. What is the name of the association that conducts large-scale research projects on college student populations with the goals of addressing student health issues and providing support programs and services for them?

DIF: Easy REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness MSC: Remembering

4. Another word for curative medicine is ________ medicine.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness MSC: Remembering

5. Surgery and drugs have become acceptable treatments for obesity. What is the term that describes this social process?

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness MSC: Understanding

6. List one way the social meaning of the causes of mental illness has changed considerably over time.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization

MSC: Understanding

7. Which sociological perspective would view disease as a threat to social order?

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Patterns of Disease

MSC: Understanding

8. Which sociological perspective would consider the inequalities between the haves and have-nots in health care?

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Patterns of Disease

MSC: Understanding

9. Which sociological perspective would pay close attention to how stigma is related to disease?

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Patterns of Disease

MSC: Understanding

10. What environmental factor have epidemiologists found increases the spread of diseases via vector organisms?

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Patterns of Disease

MSC: Remembering

11. A disease that covers a large geographical region such as a continent or the entire globe is called ________.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Patterns of Disease

MSC: Understanding

12. A disease that occurs in significantly higher numbers than might otherwise be expected is called ________.

DIF: Easy REF: 14.4 Epidemiology and Patterns of Disease

MSC: Understanding

13. The United States was the only industrialized nation without some form of nationalized health care until Congress passed ________ in 2010.

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.7 Issues in Medicine and Health Care

MSC: Remembering

ESSAY

1. Television programs in the United States emphasize the cultural belief that having a slim body is more highly valued than having a heavier body. How is this perspective an example of the nature of health being defined by its social rather than biological context?

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.1 The Sociology of Medicine, Health, and Illness

MSC: Applying

2. Shortly before Josefina’s grandmother passed away, her family gathered to make some decisions about how best to take care of her. The family members eventually decided to bring Josefina’s grandmother home from the hospital and take care of her where she would be most comfortable. Describe the three approaches to medical treatment and identify the approach that best describes Josefina’s family’s actions.

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.2 Defining Health and Illness MSC: Applying

3. Compare and contrast the different approaches to American medicine associated with structural functionalism and conflict theory. What are the strengths and weaknesses of each approach?

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.3 The Process of Medicalization

MSC: Analyzing

4. People with higher socioeconomic status can expect to live longer lives and have greater physical well-being than those with lower socioeconomic status. What factors contribute to these unequal health outcomes?

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Analyzing

5. How did food deserts emerge, and what is their effect on the health of residents?

DIF: Moderate REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Understanding

6. What is a food desert, and how does it exemplify the main point of this chapter, which is that health and illness are socially constructed?

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.5 Social Inequality, Health, and Illness

MSC: Analyzing

7. How have pharmaceutical advertisements changed the patient–doctor relationship?

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Analyzing

8. How does the story of Lia Lee illustrate the problem of health-care providers who have not developed cultural competence?

DIF: Difficult REF: 14.6 Medicine as a Social Institution

MSC: Analyzing

Document Information

Document Type:
DOCX
Chapter Number:
14
Created Date:
Aug 21, 2025
Chapter Name:
Chapter 14 Health And Illness
Author:
Kerry Ferris

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