The Importance of Social Interaction: A New Perspective on Social Epidemiology, Social Risk Factors, and Health
- 1 December 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Health Education Quarterly
- Vol. 21 (4) , 447-463
- https://doi.org/10.1177/109019819402100407
Abstract
Social epidemiology research has provided persuasive evidence of the link between the social environment—especially socioeconomic status—and health outcomes, but has failed to identify underlying mechanisms that might account for the association. The research may have been limited to date by its reliance on traditional epidemiological methods that emphasize a search for specific causal factor-disease relationships. It is time to take the research evidence and recast it to find practical solutions. We argue that the human development perspective supplies a framework for understanding the critical interaction between elements of social environment and health: Analyzing the social epidemiological research from this perspective can help to explain why and how the most potent factor, socioeconomic status, affects health outcomes. Equally important, this alternative perspective also presents health education practice implications.This publication has 68 references indexed in Scilit:
- Continuous Emotional Support During Labor in a US HospitalJAMA, 1991
- Personal control and coronary artery disease: How generalized expectancies about control may influence disease riskJournal of Psychosomatic Research, 1991
- Work stress, nonwork stress, and healthJournal of Behavioral Medicine, 1990
- The Relationship Between 'Job Strain,' Workplace Diastolic Blood Pressure, and Left Ventricular Mass IndexJAMA, 1990
- Women's childhood experience of parental separation and their subsequent health and socioeconomic status in adulthoodJournal of Biosocial Science, 1990
- The relationship of socioeconomic status to subsequent health status in systemic lupus erythematosusArthritis & Rheumatism, 1988
- Acculturation and changes in health among Navajo boarding school studentsSocial Science & Medicine, 1983
- Stress, adaptation, and immunity: Studies in humansGeneral Hospital Psychiatry, 1982
- Multivariate prediction of coronary heart disease during 8.5 year follow-up in the western collaborative group studyPublished by Elsevier ,1976
- The Nature of Man's Adaptation to His Total Environment and the Relation of This to IllnessArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1957