RESUMEN
Much discussion about mental health has revolved around treatment models. As interdisciplinary scholarship has shown, mental health knowledge, far from being a neutral product detached from the society that generated it, was shaped by politics, economics and culture. By drawing on case studies of yoga, religion and fitness, this article will examine the ways in which mental health practices-sometimes scientific, sometimes spiritual-have been conceived, debated and applied by researchers and the public. More specifically, it will interrogate the relationship between yoga, psychedelics, South Asian and Eastern religion (as understood and practiced in the USA) and mental health.
Asunto(s)
Alucinógenos , Meditación , Trastornos Mentales , Salud Mental , Psiquiatría , Psicología , Yoga , Asia , Estado de Conciencia , Cultura , Ejercicio Físico , Alucinógenos/historia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanidades , Humanos , Meditación/historia , Trastornos Mentales/etiología , Trastornos Mentales/terapia , Servicios de Salud Mental , Aptitud Física/historia , Política , Psiquiatría/historia , Psicología/historia , Religión , Problemas Sociales/historia , Problemas Sociales/psicología , Espiritualidad , Estados Unidos , Yoga/historiaRESUMEN
This commentary constructs a social history of Hillbrow, an inner-city suburb in Johannesburg, South Africa, based on a review of relevant published historical, anthropological and sociological texts. We highlight the significant continuities in the social structure of the suburb, despite the radical transformations that have occurred over the last 120 years.Originally envisaged as a healthy residential area, distinct from the industrial activity of early Johannesburg, Hillbrow was a prime location for health infrastructure to serve the city. By the late 1960s, the suburb had been transformed by the rapid construction of high rise office and apartment buildings, providing temporary low cost accommodation for young people, migrants and immigrants. In the 1980s, Hillbrow defied the apartheid state policy of racial separation of residential areas, and earned the reputation of a liberated zone of tolerance and inclusion. By the 1990s, affected by inner-city decay and the collapse of services for many apartment buildings, the suburb became associated with crime, sex work, and ungovernability. More recently, the revitalisation of the Hillbrow Health Precinct has created a more optimistic narrative of the suburb as a site for research and interventions that has the potential to have a positive impact on the health of its residents.The concentration of innovative public health interventions in Hillbrow today, particularly in the high quality health services and multidisciplinary research of the Hillbrow Health Precinct, creates the possibility for renewal of this troubled inner-city suburb.
Asunto(s)
Ciudades/historia , Servicios de Salud/historia , Población Urbana/historia , Emigrantes e Inmigrantes , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Vivienda , Humanos , Investigación , Discriminación Social , Problemas Sociales/historia , Sudáfrica , Migrantes , Urbanización/historiaRESUMEN
Black Lives Matter was first articulated just a few years ago, but it has been the leitmotif of antiracist struggles for generations. The Movement for Black Lives extends the work of previous movements that challenged forms of oppression that act on Black bodies with impunity. It should be understood in the context of Ida B. Wells' anti-lynching campaign, Fannie Lou Hamer's reproductive justice demands, and the Black Panther Party's health activism. The 50th anniversary of the Black Panther Party is an occasion to recall that its work confronted the callous neglect and the corporeal surveillance and abuse of poor Black communities. Similar demands have been the centrifugal force of social movements that for centuries have refused to have Black lives cast beyond the human boundary.
Asunto(s)
Negro o Afroamericano/historia , Disparidades en el Estado de Salud , Racismo/historia , Problemas Sociales/historia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Humanos , Pobreza/etnología , Pobreza/historia , Prejuicio , Problemas Sociales/etnologíaRESUMEN
The multiplication of offences prompted by racism and the increase of complaints for racism leads us to consider the illusory concept of "human races". This idea crossed the history, and was reinforced by the discovery of remote tribes and human fossils, and by the development of sociobiology and quantitative psychology. Deprived of scientific base, the theory of the "races" must bow before the notions of genetic variation and unicity of mankind.
Asunto(s)
Grupos Raciales/historia , Racismo/historia , Regiones de la Antigüedad , Animales , Antropología/historia , Evolución Biológica , Derechos Civiles/historia , Europa (Continente) , Francia , Alemania , Grecia , Historia del Siglo XV , Historia del Siglo XVI , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Historia Antigua , Historia Medieval , Humanos , Historia Natural/historia , Psicología/historia , Mundo Romano , Selección Genética , Problemas Sociales/historia , Sociobiología/historia , Reino Unido , Estados UnidosRESUMEN
Rates of illicit drug use and drug-related deaths have continuously increased in developed countries since the 1960s even though the patterns of use and thus the related mortality differ from region to region. In Europe heroin is the drug most often implicated in overdoses. The decedents are most often male, between 20 and 30 years of age and have a long history of drug use. According to the majority of available studies a concomitant use of alcohol and benzodiazepines is one of the risk factors of heroin overdose. In our study we have examined the basic demographic and toxicological features of illicit drug related death cases in Budapest, Hungary between 1994 and 2012. Drug overdose death cases have been divided into two subgroups according to the substances responsible for the death of the subjects: an opioid group and a non-opioid group. The huge majority (87.9%) of decedents died due to heroin overdose and were male (87%). There has been a significant increase in the mean age of the opioid group for the past 19 years. The majority of heroin overdose cases (58%) has had no other psychofarmacons present at the toxicological examination. We have found a slight but significant positive correlation (p=0.0204, r=0.349) between the number of heroin overdose death cases and the mean concentration of street level purity heroin. Most of the examined demographic and toxicological features of the population studied have been in concordance with data previously reported. However, in contrast to other studies we report a strikingly high proportion of "pure" heroin overdose cases where no other psychoactive substances were found. The reason for this is currently unknown; we can only speculate that it can be related to the fact that heroin is used and abused differently from other countries. The remarkable phenomenon of the "ageing" of heroin users may also support a change in the drug use habits of the youngest population. The emergence and spread of new designer drugs also change the mortality characteristics of the youngest abusers and pose a new challenge for researchers.
Asunto(s)
Sobredosis de Droga/epidemiología , Dependencia de Heroína/epidemiología , Problemas Sociales/tendencias , Adulto , Distribución por Edad , Factores de Edad , Anciano , Sobredosis de Droga/historia , Sobredosis de Droga/mortalidad , Femenino , Dependencia de Heroína/historia , Dependencia de Heroína/mortalidad , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Humanos , Hungría/epidemiología , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Sistemas Políticos , Factores de Riesgo , Problemas Sociales/historia , Trastornos Relacionados con Sustancias/epidemiologíaRESUMEN
The concept of core competencies in graduate medical education was introduced by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education of the American Medical Association to semiquantitatively assess the professional performance of students, residents, practitioners, and faculty. Many aspects of the career of J. Marion Sims, MD, are exemplary of those core competencies: MEDICAL KNOWLEDGE: Author of the first American textbook related to gynecology. MEDICAL CARE: Innovator of the Sims' Vaginal Speculum, Sims' Position, Sims' Test, and vesico-/rectovaginal fistulorrhaphy; advocated abdominal exploration for penetrating wounds; performed the first cholecystostomy. PROFESSIONALISM: Served as President of the New York Academy of Medicine, the American Medical Association, and the American Gynecologic Society. INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS/COMMUNICATION: Cared for the indigent, hearthless, indentured, disenfranchised; served as consulting surgeon to the Empress Eugénie (France), the Duchess of Hamilton (Scotland), the Empress of Austria, and other royalty of the aristocratic Houses of Europe; accorded the National Order of the Legion of Honor. PRACTICE-BASED LEARNING: Introduction of silver wire sutures; adoption of the principles of asepsis/antisepsis; adoption of the principles of general anesthesia. SYSTEMS-BASED PRACTICE: Established the Woman's Hospital, New York City, New York, the predecessor of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Center for the Treatment of Cancer and Allied Diseases; organized the Anglo-American Ambulance Corps under the patronage of Napoleon III. What led him to a life of clinical and humanitarian service? First, he was determined to succeed. His formal medical/surgical education was perhaps the best available to North Americans during that era. Second, he was courageous in experimentation and innovation, applying new developments in operative technique, asepsis/antisepsis, and general anesthesia. Third, his curiosity was not burdened by rigid adherence to old doctrines or antiquated theories. Fourth, he broadened his professional experience and knowledge by travels to renowned intellectual centers in Western Europe. Fifth, he was perceived as cautiously optimistic and judiciously positive as he interacted with patients, students, and colleagues. Courage, confidence, creativity, compassion, charisma, character, and controversy marked his career. His legacy is illustrative and exemplary of the core competencies fostered contemporaneously in graduate medical educational programs.
Asunto(s)
Cirugía General/historia , Ginecología/historia , Alabama , Guerra Civil Norteamericana , Instituciones Oncológicas/historia , Educación Médica/historia , Femenino , Cirugía General/educación , Historia del Siglo XIX , Hospitales Especializados/historia , Humanos , Ciudad de Nueva York , Postura , Problemas Sociales/historia , Instrumentos Quirúrgicos/historia , Técnicas de Sutura/historia , Libros de Texto como Asunto/historia , Fístula Vaginal/historiaRESUMEN
Involuntary commitment and custodialization were the principal tenets of British colonial public policy provisions for the management of the violent, disturbed mentally ill in Jamaica and the West Indies. Over the fifty years following Jamaica's political independence from Britain, a community engagement mental health programme has developed through a decolonization process that has negated involuntary certification, incarceration and custodialization, has promoted family therapy and short stay treatment in conventional primary and secondary care health facilities, and has promoted reliance on traditional and cultural therapies that have been extremely successful in the treatment of mental illness and the reduction of stigma in Jamaica. Collaborations involving The University of the West Indies, the Jamaican Ministry of Health and the Pan American Health Organization have been seminal in the development of the decolonizing of public policy initiatives, negating the effects of involuntary certification that had been imposed on the population by slavery and colonization. This collaboration also catalysed the psychiatric training of medical, nursing and mental health practitioners and the execution of community mental health policy in Jamaica.
Asunto(s)
Política de Salud , Trastornos Mentales/historia , Enfermos Mentales , Colonialismo/historia , Servicios Comunitarios de Salud Mental/tendencias , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Hospitales Psiquiátricos/historia , Humanos , Jamaica , Trastornos Mentales/terapia , Problemas Sociales/historiaRESUMEN
Societal variation in xenophobia, homophobia, and other prejudices is frequently explained by the economic background and political history of different countries. This article expands these explanations by considering the influence of world societal factors on individual attitudes. The empirical analysis is based on survey data collected within the World Value Survey and European Values Study framework between 1989 and 2010. Data are combined to a three-wave cross-sectional design including about 130,000 respondents from 32 countries. Results show that xenophobia and homophobia are influenced by the national political history, societal affluence, and the presence of international organizations. Global forces, however, are of particular importance for homophobia.
Asunto(s)
Diversidad Cultural , Etnicidad , Internacionalidad , Sistemas Políticos , Prejuicio , Problemas Sociales , Recolección de Datos/historia , Investigación Empírica , Etnicidad/educación , Etnicidad/etnología , Etnicidad/historia , Etnicidad/legislación & jurisprudencia , Etnicidad/psicología , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Humanos , Internacionalidad/historia , Sistemas Políticos/historia , Clase Social/historia , Problemas Sociales/economía , Problemas Sociales/etnología , Problemas Sociales/historia , Problemas Sociales/legislación & jurisprudencia , Problemas Sociales/psicologíaRESUMEN
This study fills a gap in scholarship by exploring historical news coverage of interracial relationships. It examines coverage by The New York Times, Washington Post and Times-Herald, and Chicago Tribune of the progression of the landmark civil rights case of Loving v. Virginia, in which the Supreme Court overturned Virginia's anti-miscegenation law, which prohibited marriage between any White and non-White person. An analysis of the frames and sources used in these publications' news stories about the case indicate all three publications' coverage favored the Lovings.
Asunto(s)
Derechos Civiles , Rol Judicial , Matrimonio , Medios de Comunicación de Masas , Prejuicio , Relaciones Raciales , Derechos Civiles/economía , Derechos Civiles/educación , Derechos Civiles/historia , Derechos Civiles/legislación & jurisprudencia , Derechos Civiles/psicología , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Rol Judicial/historia , Jurisprudencia/historia , Matrimonio/etnología , Matrimonio/historia , Matrimonio/legislación & jurisprudencia , Matrimonio/psicología , Medios de Comunicación de Masas/economía , Medios de Comunicación de Masas/historia , Medios de Comunicación de Masas/legislación & jurisprudencia , Relaciones Raciales/historia , Relaciones Raciales/legislación & jurisprudencia , Relaciones Raciales/psicología , Cambio Social/historia , Problemas Sociales/economía , Problemas Sociales/etnología , Problemas Sociales/historia , Problemas Sociales/legislación & jurisprudencia , Problemas Sociales/psicología , Virginia/etnologíaRESUMEN
Based on household food security surveys conducted in Ethiopia, this study seeks to understand the roles and limitations of income transfer projects as determinants of households' food security. By covering the Food-For-Work Programs (FFWPs) and the Productive Safety Net Programs (PSNPs), the study shows that these programs served as temporary safety nets for food availability, but they were limited in boosting the dietary diversity of households and their coping strategies. Households which participated in the programs increased their supply of food as a temporary buffer to seasonal asset depletion. However, participation in the programs was marred by inclusion error (food-secure households were included) and exclusion error (food-insecure households were excluded). Income transfer projects alone were not robust determinants of household food security. Rather, socio-demographic variables of education and family size as well as agricultural input of land size were found to be significant in accounting for changes in households' food security. The programs in the research sites were funded through foreign aid, and the findings of the study imply the need to reexamine the approaches adopted by bilateral donors in allocating aid to Ethiopia. At the same time the study underscores the need to improve domestic policy framework in terms of engendering rural local institutional participation in project management.
Asunto(s)
Abastecimiento de Alimentos , Programas de Gobierno , Salud Rural , Problemas Sociales , Factores Socioeconómicos , Etiopía/etnología , Abastecimiento de Alimentos/economía , Abastecimiento de Alimentos/historia , Abastecimiento de Alimentos/legislación & jurisprudencia , Programas de Gobierno/economía , Programas de Gobierno/educación , Programas de Gobierno/historia , Programas de Gobierno/legislación & jurisprudencia , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Cooperación Internacional/historia , Cooperación Internacional/legislación & jurisprudencia , Asistencia Pública/economía , Asistencia Pública/historia , Asistencia Pública/legislación & jurisprudencia , Salud Rural/educación , Salud Rural/etnología , Salud Rural/historia , Población Rural/historia , Problemas Sociales/economía , Problemas Sociales/etnología , Problemas Sociales/historia , Problemas Sociales/legislación & jurisprudencia , Problemas Sociales/psicología , Responsabilidad Social , Factores Socioeconómicos/historiaAsunto(s)
Negro o Afroamericano/historia , Centros Comunitarios de Salud/historia , Agentes Comunitarios de Salud/historia , Salud Pública/instrumentación , Accesibilidad a los Servicios de Salud/historia , Disparidades en el Estado de Salud , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Massachusetts , Pobreza/historia , Prejuicio/historia , Racismo , Problemas Sociales/historia , Estados UnidosRESUMEN
The genetic surveys of the population of Britain conducted by Weale et al. and Capelli et al. produced estimates of the Germani immigration into Britain during the early Anglo-Saxon period, c.430-c.730. These estimates are considerably higher than the estimates of archaeologists. A possible explanation suggests that an apartheid-like social system existed in the early Anglo-Saxon kingdoms resulting in the Germani breeding more quickly than the Britons. Thomas et al. attempted to model this suggestion and showed that it was a possible explanation if all Anglo-Saxon kingdoms had such a system for up to 400 years. I noted that their explanation ignored the probability that Germani have been arriving in Britain for at least the past three millennia, including Belgae and Roman soldiers, and not only during the early Anglo-Saxon period. I produced a population model for Britain taking into account this long term, low level migration that showed that the estimates could be reconciled without the need for introducing an apartheid-like system. In turn, Thomas et al. responded, criticizing my model and arguments, which they considered persuasively written but wanting in terms of methodology, data sources, underlying assumptions, and application. Here, I respond in detail to those criticisms and argue that it is still unnecessary to introduce an apartheid-like system in order to reconcile the different estimates of Germani arrivals. A point of confusion is that geneticists are interested in ancestry, while archaeologists are interested in ethnicity: it is the bones, not the burial rites, which are important in the present context.
Asunto(s)
Emigrantes e Inmigrantes/historia , Genética de Población/historia , Regiones de la Antigüedad/etnología , Alemania/etnología , Historia Antigua , Humanos , Modelos Genéticos , Problemas Sociales/historia , Factores de Tiempo , Reino Unido/etnologíaRESUMEN
Tracing the roots of racial attitudes in historical events and individual biographies has been a long-standing goal of race relations scholars. Recent years have seen a new development in racial attitude research: Local community context has entered the spotlight as a potential influence on racial views. The race composition of the locality has been the most common focus; evidence from earlier decades suggests that white Americans are more likely to hold anti-black attitudes if they live in areas where the African-American population is relatively large. However, an influential 2000 article argued that the socioeconomic composition of the white community is a more powerful influence on white attitudes: In low-socioeconomic status (SES) locales, "stress-inducing" deprivations and hardships in whites' own lives purportedly lead them to disparage blacks. The study reported here reassesses this "scapegoating" claim, using data from the 1998 to 2002 General Social Surveys linked to 2000 census information about communities. Across many dimensions of racial attitudes, there is pronounced influence of both local racial proportions and college completion rates among white residents. However, the economic dimension of SES exerts negligible influence on white racial attitudes, suggesting that local processes other than scapegoating must be at work.
Asunto(s)
Redes Comunitarias , Diversidad Cultural , Grupos de Población , Relaciones Raciales , Características de la Residencia , Percepción Social , Redes Comunitarias/historia , Características Culturales/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Humanos , Grupos de Población/educación , Grupos de Población/etnología , Grupos de Población/historia , Grupos de Población/legislación & jurisprudencia , Grupos de Población/psicología , Relaciones Raciales/historia , Relaciones Raciales/legislación & jurisprudencia , Relaciones Raciales/psicología , Características de la Residencia/historia , Cambio Social/historia , Identificación Social , Problemas Sociales/economía , Problemas Sociales/etnología , Problemas Sociales/historia , Problemas Sociales/legislación & jurisprudencia , Problemas Sociales/psicología , Estados Unidos/etnologíaRESUMEN
Reintegrative shaming theory (RST) argues that social aggregates characterized by high levels of communitarianism and nonstigmatizing shaming practices benefit from relatively low levels of crime. We combine aggregate measures from the World Values Survey with available macro-level data to test this hypothesis. Additionally, we examine the extent to which communitarianism and shaming mediate the effects of cultural and structural factors featured prominently in other macro-level theoretical frameworks (e.g., inequality, modernity, sex ratio, etc.). Findings provide some support for RST, showing homicide to vary with societal levels of communitarianism and informal stigmatization. However, while the effects of modernity and sex ratio were mediated by RST processes, suppression was indicated for economic inequality. Implications for theory and research are discussed.
Asunto(s)
Crimen , Características Culturales , Homicidio , Vergüenza , Responsabilidad Social , Crimen/economía , Crimen/etnología , Crimen/historia , Crimen/legislación & jurisprudencia , Crimen/psicología , Criminales/educación , Criminales/historia , Criminales/legislación & jurisprudencia , Criminales/psicología , Características Culturales/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Homicidio/economía , Homicidio/etnología , Homicidio/historia , Homicidio/legislación & jurisprudencia , Homicidio/psicología , Rol Judicial/historia , Problemas Sociales/economía , Problemas Sociales/etnología , Problemas Sociales/historia , Problemas Sociales/legislación & jurisprudencia , Problemas Sociales/psicologíaRESUMEN
'Taking the (southern) waters' argues that, in the pre-Civil War period, the space of Virginia's mineral water resorts and the philosophy of southern hydropathic medicine enabled--indeed, fostered--white southerners' constructions of a 'nationalist,' pro-slavery ideology. In the first half of the paper, the author explains how white southern health-seekers came to view the springs region as a medicinal resource peculiarly designed for the healing of southern diseases and for the restoration of white southern constitutions; in the second half, she shows how physical and social aspects of the resorts, such as architectural choices and political events, supported and encouraged pro-slavery ideologies. Taken together, these medical-social analyses reveal how elite white southerners in the antebellum period came to associate the health of their peculiarly 'southern' bodies with the future health of an independent southern nation, one that elided black bodily presence at the same time that its social structures and scientific apparatuses relied upon enslaved black labor.
Asunto(s)
Baños/historia , Colonias de Salud/historia , Cambio Social/historia , Problemas Sociales/historia , Guerra Civil Norteamericana , Actitud Frente a la Salud , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos , Prejuicio , Medio Social , Virginia , West VirginiaRESUMEN
The paper explores psychiatry's responses to the twentieth-century socio-political currents in Latvia by focusing on social objectives, clinical ideologies, and institutional contexts of Soviet mental health care. The tradition of German biological psychiatry in which Baltic psychiatrists had been trained blended well with the materialistic monism of Soviet psychoneurology. Pavlov's teaching of the second signal system was well suited to Soviet ideological needs: speech stimuli were seen as a vehicle for moulding the individual's mind. The transformation in diagnostic practices during the 1970s and 1980s reflected the demise of optimism about the capacity of the self to model itself to the needs of the society. Latvian psychiatry was prepared to embrace more individualistic and pessimistic theories of the self.
Asunto(s)
Hospitales Psiquiátricos/historia , Trastornos Mentales/historia , Filosofía Médica/historia , Política , Psiquiatría/historia , Problemas Sociales/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , LetoniaRESUMEN
The strategy adopted by the neoliberal state to maintain social order and safeguard private property in a context of economic deregulation and social precariousness has destroyed the welfare state and aggravated poverty, depriving the masses of any form of social protection while subjecting them to repression. The reinforcement of the repressive state apparatus is associated with the social instability provoked by the lack of social policies, the degradation of living conditions for the great majority of the population, and the amplification of income and property inequalities both in the so-called capitalist periphery and in the richest industrialized countries. The penalization of misery is revealed as a new expression of class domination.
Asunto(s)
Gobierno , Pobreza , Problemas Sociales , Bienestar Social , Factores Socioeconómicos , Economía/historia , Economía/legislación & jurisprudencia , Gobierno/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Pobreza/economía , Pobreza/etnología , Pobreza/historia , Pobreza/legislación & jurisprudencia , Pobreza/psicología , Políticas de Control Social/economía , Políticas de Control Social/historia , Políticas de Control Social/legislación & jurisprudencia , Predominio Social/historia , Problemas Sociales/economía , Problemas Sociales/etnología , Problemas Sociales/historia , Problemas Sociales/legislación & jurisprudencia , Problemas Sociales/psicología , Bienestar Social/economía , Bienestar Social/etnología , Bienestar Social/historia , Bienestar Social/legislación & jurisprudencia , Bienestar Social/psicología , Factores Socioeconómicos/historiaRESUMEN
In this article, the author uses a slum clearance project in Lexington, Kentucky, as a lens through which to examine the spatial dynamics of racial residential segregation during the first half of the twentieth century. At the time, urban migration and upward socioeconomic mobility on the part of African Americans destabilized extant residential segregation patterns. Amid this instability, various spatial practices were employed in the interest of maintaining white social and economic supremacy. The author argues that such practices were indicative of a thoroughgoing reinvention of urban socio-spatial order that in turn precipitated the vastly expanded scale of residential segregation still found in U.S. cities today. Evidence of this reinvented ordering of urban space lies in the rendering of some long-standing African American neighborhoods as "out of place" within it and the use of slum clearance to remove the "menace" such neighborhoods posed to it.