Ethnographic Research in Medical Sociology
- 1 May 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Sociological Methods & Research
- Vol. 25 (4) , 452-494
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0049124197025004004
Abstract
Medical sociology ranges from studies of formal medical care to those of health, healing, and caring practices outside the health care system. This field has had a history of ethnographic and qualitative research since its beginnings. Because few studies in medical sociology derive from immersion in a setting, the authors examine those qualitative works in which researchers and subjects had sustained contact. They focus only on major areas in which ethnographic contributions have clustered: (1) disability, chronic illness, and terminal illness; (2) caring and curing; (3) medical sociology in aging research; (4) socialization into health care professions; and (5) the ethnography of ethics. Throughout this review, the added value of ethnographic research to each specific area is noted. Ethnographic research has enriched medical sociology with its emphasis on descriptive detail, meanings, ongoing processes, and concepts. The article ends with a discussion of methodological considerations for conducting research and a summary statement.This publication has 63 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Body, Identity, and Self: Adapting To ImpairmentThe Sociological Quarterly, 1995
- The forms and limits of medical ethicsSocial Science & Medicine, 1994
- The Rhetoric of Self-Change: Illness Experience as NarrativeThe Sociological Quarterly, 1993
- Discourse, organisation and the surgical ward roundSociology of Health & Illness, 1993
- The social construction of noncompliance: a study of health care and social service providers in everyday practiceSociology of Health & Illness, 1991
- Pain: Its experience and treatmentsSocial Science & Medicine, 1989
- Stress and Burnout in the Social World of HospiceThe Hospice Journal, 1987
- Loss of self: a fundamental form of suffering in the chronically illSociology of Health & Illness, 1983
- Some Contingencies of the Moral Evaluation and Control of Clientele: The Case of the Hospital Emergency ServiceAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1972
- The Fate of Idealism in Medical SchoolAmerican Sociological Review, 1958