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Medical Sociology and Old Age:

Towards a sociology of health in later life
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Routledge, Oct 27, 2008 - Health & Fitness - 150 pages

The nature of health in later life has conventionally been studied from two perspectives. Medical sociologists have focused on the failing body, chronic illness, infirmity and mortality, while social gerontologists on the other hand have focused on the epidemiology of old age and health and social policy. By examining these perspectives, Higgs and Jones show how both standpoints have a restricted sense of contemporary ageing which has prevented an understanding of the way in which health in later life has changed. In the book, the authors point out that the current debates on longevity and disability are being transformed by the emergence of a fitter and healthier older population. This third age - where fitness and participation are valorised – leads to the increasing salience of issues such as bodily control, age-denial and anti-ageing medicine. By discussing the key issue of old age versus ageing, the authors examine the prospect of a new sociology – a sociology of health in later life.

Medical Sociology and Old Age is essential reading for all students and researchers of medical sociology and gerontology and for anyone concerned with the challenge of ageing populations in the twenty-first century.

This book is essential reading for all students and researchers of medical sociology and gerontology.

  

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Contents

Social gerontology and old age
17
The body at later ages
34
New developments in social gerontology
49
The death of old age critical approaches as undertakers
66
The birth of a new sociology of health in later life
81
Conclusion
99
Notes
115
Index
140
Copyright

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About the author (2008)

Paul Higgs is Reader in Medical Sociology at University College London.

Ian Rees Jones is Professor of Sociology of Health at the Bangor University, Wales.

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