Apr 19, 2024  
College Catalog 2022-2023 
    
College Catalog 2022-2023 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

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SOCY 2000 - Sociology of Health & Human Behavior

Credit Hours: 4.00


Prerequisites: None

A survey of the field of health and human behavior from a sociological perspective. The course will explore the relationship between health and human development, the structure and function of health institutions, public health, and health education, the variety of roles of health practitioners, and the patterns of health care in American society.

Billable Contact Hours: 4

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Transfer Possibilities
Michigan Transfer Network (MiTransfer) - Utilize this website to easily search how your credits transfer to colleges and universities.
OUTCOMES AND OBJECTIVES
Outcome 1:
Upon completion of this course, students will be able to recognize the interaction between society and health, including the social factors that contribute to illness.

Objectives:

  1. Describe the connection between social class and heart disease.
  2. Explain the difference between illness and disease.
  3. Identify critical social factors that prevent illness.

Outcome 2:
Upon completion of this course, students will be able to recognize the sociological perspective within health professions, health care institutions, as well as professional roles and ideologies.

Objectives:

  1. Describe the manner in which the medical profession became a model of professionalization.
  2. Describe the professional status of physicians today.
  3. Identify major aspects of the past that have carried over to shape hospital today.
  4. Explain the hospital patient role.

Outcome 3:
Upon completion of this course, students will be able to describe health systems within a global context.

Objectives:

  1. Describe and categorize four systems of health care that exist globally.
  2. List five characteristics of each system.
  3. List countries that have implemented the system.
  4. Compare and contrast each system.

Outcome 4:
Upon completion of this course, students will be able to describe forces within the health care field and society leading to increased government participation in the delivery of health care.

Objectives:

  1. List and explain types of government intervention.
  2. Describe loss of autonomy among doctors.
  3. Discuss hospital flow charts.

Outcome 5: Upon completion of this course, students will be able to demonstrate overall knowledge of healing options or alternative care.

Objectives:

  1. List types of alternative healers and alternative medicine.
  2. Explain chiropractors, folk healers, and faith healers.
  3. Explain acupressure, aromatic oils, diet supplements.
  4. Explain medical treatment as being compatible with beliefs of various cultures.

COMMON DEGREE OUTCOMES (CDO)
• Communication: The graduate can communicate effectively for the intended purpose and audience.
• Critical Thinking: The graduate can make informed decisions after analyzing information or evidence related to the issue.
• Global Literacy: The graduate can analyze human behavior or experiences through cultural, social, political, or economic perspectives.
• Information Literacy: The graduate can responsibly use information gathered from a variety of formats in order to complete a task.
• Quantitative Reasoning: The graduate can apply quantitative methods or evidence to solve problems or make judgments.
• Scientific Literacy: The graduate can produce or interpret scientific information presented in a variety of formats.

CDO marked YES apply to this course:
Communication: YES
Critical Thinking: YES
Global Literacy: YES
Information Literacy: YES
Quantitative Reasoning: YES
Scientific Literacy: YES

COURSE CONTENT OUTLINE

  1. Medicine and Sociology
    1. Lifestyle problems and how the Medical Model views these problems as an illness.
      1. Social class health and illness
      2. Medical ghettos
      3. Social aspects of eating disorders
      4. Alcoholism ‐ disease model vs. social factors
  2. Epidemiology
    1. AIDS ‐ the impending quarantine ‐ video
    2. Complexity of modern ills
      1. Exercise and health
      2. Heart disease
    3. HME perspective
      1. Epidemiology of hypertension
  3. Social Demography of Health
    1. Gender differences
      1. Depression
      2. Suicide
      3. Mental illness
    2. Therapy ‐ Sexist or fair? Psychoanalytic therapy
    3. Why do women live longer than men?
    4. Social class and mental disorder
  4. Physicians, Patients, and Medical Care Illness Behavior
    1. Talcott Parsons sick role
      1. Illness as a deviance
      2. Critique of the sick role
      3. Factors affecting decision to seek the sick status
    2. Labeling theory
      1. Critique of labeling theory
    3. Health belief model
      1. Help seeking
      2. Responses
  5. Medical Socialization and the Medical Profession
    1. Medical school experience
    2. Power relationships
    3. Authority
    4. Oral presentation
  6. Social Control over the Medical Profession
    1. License to err 7‐part series written by Dolly Katz
  7. Health Occupations
    1. Chiropractors
    2. Pharmacists
    3. Optometrists
    4. Osteopaths
    5. Nurses
  8. The Hospital
    1. Forms of hospitals
      1. General hospitals
      2. Specialty hospitals
      3. Hospital as a large‐scale organization
  9. Health Policy in Selected Countries
    1. Sweden
    2. Russia
    3. Great Britain
    4. Japan
    5. Borderline medicine Canada (video)
  10. Special Issues
    1. Mental illness
    2. Factors in mental illness
      1. Social class
      2. Child rearing patterns (video ‐ Child of Rage)
      3. Homosexuality
  11. Biomedical Innovation
    1. Life support system
    2. Concepts of death
    3. Organ transplants
  12. Health Care in the U.S
    1. Six myths of American medical care
    2. Fee for service system
    3. DRGs (Diagnosis‐Relate d Groups)

Primary Faculty
Kingry, Bryan
Secondary Faculty
Zaranek, Rochelle
Associate Dean
Williams-Chehmani, Angie
Dean
Pritchett, Marie



Official Course Syllabus - Macomb Community College, 14500 E 12 Mile Road, Warren, MI 48088



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