Critical issues in rural health / Edited by Nina Glasgow, Lois Wright Morton [and] Nan E. Johnson
Material type:
- 9780813800103
- RA 771.5 .C75 2004
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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NU Clark Circulation | Non-fiction | GC RA 771.5 .C75 2004 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | NUCLA000001909 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Foreword -- John A. Krout -- Preface -- Authors -- 1. Introduction -- Part I. Rural morbidity, disability, and mortality -- Part II. Challenges to a health rural America -- Part III. Health disparities among people of color/disadvantaged groups -- Part IV. Formal health care in rural America -- Part V. Improving health: can theory be the guide?
"A large sector of the United States (U.S.) population. About 22 percent of Americans, approximately 55 million people, are considered “rural” residents. Rural people have a unique set of health issues; they experience social, cultural, and economic disadvantages that can increase their risk for adverse health consequences.
The first text of its kind, Critical Issues in Rural Health, provides comprehensive sociological study of rural health and health care trends in the United States, by examining the health and well-being of rural populations at all stages of life. Editors Glasgow, Morton, and Johnson present integrative reviews of theory and research on rural health issues, with the most up-to-date statistics of empirical research. This informative and groundbreaking text goes beyond the scope of previous studies and emphasizes differences between rural and urban areas in health and health care. Surprisingly little research has examined the differences in disability and morality rates by residence or degree of rurality-this book does. In addition, contributing authors report on the impact of age or life stage, race and ethnicity, social class, rural occupations, and community structure on various health issues."
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