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Culture and Meaning in Health Services Research

An Applied Approach

Elisa J Sobo

$305

Hardback

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English
Left Coast Press Inc
15 March 2009
Culture and Meaning in Health Services Research is a practical guide to applying interpretive qualitative methods to pressing healthcare delivery problems. A leading medical anthropologist who has spent many years working in applied healthcare settings, Sobo combines sophisticated theoretical insights and methodological rigor with authentic, real-world examples and applications. In addition to clearly explaining the nuanced practice of ethnography and guiding the reader through specific methods that can be used in focus groups or interviewing to yield useful findings, Sobo considers the social relationships and power dynamics that influence field entry, data ownership, research deliverables, and authorship decisions. Crafted to communicate the importance of culture and meaning across the many disciplines engaged in health services research, this book is ideal for courses in such fields as public health and health administration, nursing, anthropology, health psychology, and sociology.

By:  
Imprint:   Left Coast Press Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 20mm
Weight:   1.260kg
ISBN:   9781598741360
ISBN 10:   1598741365
Pages:   336
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Primary ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Elisa J. Sobo is an associate professor of anthropology at San Diego State University and a clinical associate professor in the University of California San Diego School of Medicine. She also has ten years of full-time work experience in applied medial research settings, including five years at Children's Hospital San Diego. Sobo is author, co-author, or co-editor of nine books, including Using Methods in the Field: a Practical Introduction and Casebook (AltaMira Press) and Child Health Services Research: Applications, Innovations, and Insights (Jossey-Bass). She publishes extensively in major social science, healthcare, and medical journals.

Reviews for Culture and Meaning in Health Services Research: An Applied Approach

In this book, Sobo bridges the disciplinary divide between health and social science, demonstrating the distinct angle of thoughtful analysis that anthropological method and interpretative tradition bring to unraveling the complexities of health service systems. Recognizing that many holes within current evidentiary health knowledge pertain to interactions in which human agency plays a central role, she engages the reader in a delightful and opinionated dialogue that creatively deconstructs conventional assumptions and convincingly reveals what social theorizing contributes to understanding and solving the problems confronting health service researchers today. -Sally Thorne, Professor and Director, UBC School of Nursing Sobo provides health professionals and social scientists with a lifetime of real-world lessons aptly illustrating the added value and challenges of employing anthropologically informed qualitative methods in health service research in clinical settings. This highly engaging and very readable how-to book makes a compelling case for why this type of research is necessary and what it takes to get it done in busy clinical environments where researchers must maneuver carefully and be attentive to a system undergoing constant change. Notably, Sobo addresses the contexts in which research results are released and speaks to the power of teaching stories and translational research in a field largely guided by audit culture. The book is timely and speaks to both health social science and health care audiences. -Mark Nichter, University of Arizona To meet today's health care challenges we must bring the methods and analytic skills and passions of medical anthropology into health service settings. Elisa Sobo boldly shows the way. Writing in an engaging and direct style, she argues the importance of meaning in hospitals and health care, clarifies what anthropologists do in such settings, and offers straightforward and sensible guidance about methods and everyday practice. In doing so, Sobo provides compelling reasons for health care providers to want anthropologists, and will inspire anthropologists and their students to take up the opportunities. -Lenore Manderson, School of Psychology, Psychiatry and Psychological Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Monash University ...Aimed as a practical guide for health services researchers, this book goes beyond providing a how to' text to address the context and value of anthropologically informed qualitative health services research. It is aimed not only at other medical anthropologists working in healthcare research, such as the author herself, but also those engaged in health services research from other disciplines and backgrounds. The book achieves this by giving equal attention to the contexts of both health services research and anthropologically informed qualitative methods, inviting the reader to reflect on their own areas of familiarity as well as reflecting on the professional domains of others. Sobo makes extensive use of case studies and examples from her own experi- ence, setting out issues using illustrative anecdotes in a way that makes the subject matter accessible to readers less familiar with the field. This style of a sequentially written narrative may not suit readers who are seeking a more compartmentalized research methods text which can be dipped into'. The broad scope of the book and the interweaving of key concepts, personal experience and case studies, makes the whole book journey worthwhile and rewarding to orientate the reader to the subject matter. ...- Kathryn Roulston, Qualitative Research


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