05477nam 2200745Ia 450 991082123260332120200520144314.01-280-77112-797866136818981-84855-215-7(CKB)1000000000765356(EBL)453245(OCoLC)535128177(SSID)ssj0000341295(PQKBManifestationID)12119411(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000341295(PQKBWorkID)10390699(PQKB)10168261(MiAaPQ)EBC453245(Au-PeEL)EBL453245(CaPaEBR)ebr10315758(CaONFJC)MIL368189(OCoLC)ocn503444774(PPN)187306362(EXLCZ)99100000000076535620090120d2008 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrPatients, consumers and civil society /edited by Susan M. Chambre, Melinda Goldner1st ed.Bingley Emerald JAI20081 online resource (320 p.)Advances in medical sociology,1057-6290 ;v. 10Description based upon print version of record.1-84855-214-9 Includes bibliographical references.Patients, Consumers And Civil Society; Copyright Page; Contents; List of Contributors; Chapter 1. Introduction; Acknowledgments; References; Part I: Patients, Consumers and Health Systems; Chapter 2. No Longer a Patient: The Social Construction of the Medical Consumer; Methods; Becoming a Medical Consumer; Conclusion; Note; Acknowledgments; References; Chapter 3. Direct to Consumer Responsibility: Medical Neoliberalism in Pharmaceutical Advertising and Drug Development; Background; Methods; Medical Neoliberalism in Direct-to-Consumer Advertising (DTCA)Medical Neoliberalism in Clinical TrialsConclusion; Notes; References; Chapter 4. Making Connections: Egg Donation, the Internet, and the New Reproductive Technology Marketplace; Introduction; Theoretical Framework; Findings; Notes; References; Chapter 5. Selling the Ideal Birth: Rationalization and Re-Enchantment in the Marketing of Maternity Care; Introduction; Medicalization, Consumerism, and Natural Birth; Selling Birth: A Thematic Analysis of Childbirth Marketing; Tensions in the Rationalization and Re-Enchantment of Birth in the Hospital; Conclusion; Note; Acknowledgments; ReferencesChapter 6. Too Posh to Push? Comparative Perspectives on Maternal Request Caesarean Sections in Canada, the US, The UK and FinlandShifting Perspectives on Medical and Maternity Consumerism; Methods; Defining Maternal Request Caesarean Sections; Impetus for the Rising Concern With MRCS; Framing MRCS as an Issue of a Woman's Right to Choose; Re-Orienting Obstetrical Policy and Practice; Discussion; Notes; References; Part II: Organizations, Culture and Political Context; Chapter 7. Self-Help Groups Challenge Health Care Systems in the US and UK; IntroductionConceptualizations of Consumerism in HealthCharacteristics of Health Care Systems and the Voluntary Sectors of Society; The Voluntary Health Sector; National and Community Levels of Social Change and Consumer Transformation; Case 1: Personality Disorder; Case 2: Carers; Case 3: People Who Stutter - From Self-Blaming ''Victim'' to Critic of Stuttering Therapy; Case 4: Grow - from Ex-Mental Patient to Respected Member of ''A Caring and Sharing'' Community; Conclusions; Acknowledgments; ReferencesChapter 8. From Discovery to Recovery and Beyond: The Role of Voluntary Health Sector Organizations in the Lives of Women with Breast CancerIntroduction; Review of the Literature; The Context: VHOs in Canada; Methods; Findings; Discussion; Conclusion; Notes; Acknowledgments; References; Chapter 9. The Clubhouse Model: Mental Health Consumer-Provider Partnerships for Recovery; Introduction; Deinstitutionalization, Empowerment, and the Clubhouse Movement; Clubhouse Philosophy, Principles, and Methodology; Operational Model; Conclusion; References; Chapter 10. Straight from the HeartGiving to Health in the NetherlandsMedical Sociology is the among the largest and first subdisciplines in Sociology. It is an area of ongoing work, advancing theory, method and our substantive understanding of social life. This series brings together the newest issues and most current concerns in Medical Sociology, in an ongoing collection of edited volumes. Each volume is edited by a medical sociologist with a particular expertise, bringing together contributions from sociologists working in different settings and nations, exploring one particular advance in Medical Sociology.Advances in medical sociology ;v. 10.ConsumersAttitudesPatient advocacyPatients' associationsPatientsAttitudesConsumersAttitudes.Patient advocacy.Patients' associations.PatientsAttitudes.306.461Chambre Susan Maizel1631184Goldner Melinda1631185MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910821232603321Patients, consumers and civil society3969872UNINA