Term
define the components of social class |
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Definition
social class, education, income, wealth (property), occupation |
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Term
describe the trend in income inequality over the past several decades, and two ways that these trends have been shown graphically |
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Definition
the trend in income inequality has been increasing |
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Term
define the Gini coefficient |
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Definition
the ratio between the highest income and the lowest income
HIGH GC = MORE INEQUALrITY LOW GC = LESS INEQUALITY b/w income (more evenly distributed) |
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Term
define income mobility, and describe how it has changed over the past several decades |
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Definition
income mobility is the ability to improve economic status. it has been increasing |
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Term
provide one argument in defence of income inequality |
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Definition
income inequality promotes motivation to those in the lower class |
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Term
provide arguments for and against the statement, "the poor can escape poverty if they work hard enough" and explain how belief in this principle might affect social and economic policy |
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Definition
to an extent very situational depends on the opportunities presented and the type of environment |
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Term
state the approx. proportion of total wealth in the US owned by the wealthiest 20% of the US population and the proportion owed by the wealthiest 1% of the US population (see the PBs NewsHour pie chart and the graph by Allegretto) |
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Definition
Top 20% own 84% of total wealth in the US. The wealthiest 1% of the population own ~30%. |
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Term
Describe the relationship between socio-economic status and health and give at least three specific examples |
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Definition
low birth weight more common in poor babies death rates are higher in ages 25-64 for people < HS/GED Hypertension/Diabetes/Heart Conditions are greater in people below 100% of poverty level |
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Term
define the wealth health gradient |
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Definition
The more wealthier you are, the more healthier you are. |
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Term
explain at least five ways that socio-economic status might affect health, and place these in the context of the sociological and psychological theories of health behaviour discussed earlier in the quarter |
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Definition
lack of access/availability to healthy foods, availability of cheap food, agricultural policy |
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Term
describe the association between socio economic status and race/ethnicity |
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Definition
Hispanic/Blacks are more poor than whites/Asians |
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Term
describe the recent trends in the wealth gap between the white population and the black and Hispanic populations in the US |
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Definition
Whites are more wealthy than Hispanics, who are more wealthy than Blacks. |
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Term
explain whether the difference in socio-economic status can explain differences in health status by race and ethnicity and provide evidence for your answer |
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Definition
the poorer a population is, the poorer health due to access to care, good food, etc and there are racial disparities in socio-economic status. |
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Term
name two broad categories of environment that affect health and give examples of each |
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Definition
physical (built) environment ie) risk exposure, resource deprivation
&
social environment ie) neighborhood socioeconomic characteristics (poverty rate, income level, unemployment rate), social capital |
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Term
distinguish between theories of risk exposure and resource deprivation |
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Definition
too much of a bad thing or too little of a good thing |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
ie) lack of resources for something healthy |
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Term
define social capital and explain how it might be related to health |
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Definition
degree of social trust, extent of social networks, and willingness to provide mutual aid and reciprocity between individuals in a given area
---lack of social support/STRESS |
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Term
define residential segregation |
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Definition
degree to which groups of people categories on various scales (race, ethnicity, income) occupy difference space within urban areas |
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Term
explain the difference between residential segregation and ethnic enclaves with respect to social media |
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Definition
residential segregation degree to which groups of people categorized on various scales (race, ethnicity, income) occupy different space within urban areas
ethnic enclaves residing in racially homogeneous enclaves may increase social capital by increasing social support networks residing in highly segregated, socioeconomically isolated, high poverty areas may decrease social capital |
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Term
define and interpret the dissimilarity index |
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Definition
measures the relation separation or integration of groups across all neighbours of a city or metropolitan area. between two populations in respect to each other.
HIGH INDEX (~1) = MORE SEGREGATED THE AREA IS LOW INDEX (~0) = MORE EQUALLY DISTRIBUTED |
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Term
describe historical events that led to current patterns of black-white residential segregation, and relate them to the concept of institutionalized racism |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
a genetically determined characteristic |
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Term
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Definition
one of two or more alternative forms of a gene that arise by mutation and are found at the same place on a chromosome |
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Term
give two examples of single-gene traits that differ by race/ethnic group |
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Definition
BRCA1 - ASKANAZI JEWISH ALDH-2 - ASIANS |
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Term
provide evidence either for or against the notion that genetic differences underlie disparities in polygenic diseases across race/ethnic groups |
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Definition
a lot of it was for environment and the thrifty gene hypothesis |
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Term
define the concept of gene-environment interaction and explain how it applies in the case of the thrifty genotype hypothesis |
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Definition
"higher prevalance of obesity and diabete among Pima Indians is a result of selective survival" |
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Term
provide evidence to justify whether or not race has a biological basis |
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Definition
no because there have not been any genetic markers found in one race that is not in another |
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Term
distinguish between a discrete vs a continuously distributed trait, and explain the relevance of this difference to the concept of race |
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Definition
widows peak discrete; continuous trait would be --- height of a continuously trait, skin color |
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Term
explain how immigration patterns reinforce the concept of race in the US |
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Definition
immigration patterns give us the false impressive of distinct "races" most people have migrated here from very specific places. |
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Term
explain why geography is a good predictor of genetic variation across populations |
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Definition
populations in a particular region will likely have more common genes because of the mating that occurs within said region |
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Term
name the continent with the greatest genetic diversity and explain why |
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Definition
Africa because of the "Out of Africa" hypothesis |
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Term
explain what is meant by the idea that there is greater genetic variation within a race than across races |
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Definition
within each race there is a greater genetic variation because all races have a high percentage of genes in common |
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Term
name three major categories of health coverage and identify the largest category among the insured population |
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Definition
56.2% employer-sponsored; 19.8% medicaid/other public 18.5% uninsured 5.5% private non-group |
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Term
state the proportion and number of the adult (nonelderly) population who are uninsured |
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Definition
18.5% uninsured ~49 million |
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Term
describe the uninsured population with respect to proportion living in households with no workers, part-time workers, or at least one full time worker |
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Definition
family work status: 61% 1 or more full time workers 16% part time workers 24% no workers |
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Term
identify population groups (w/ respect to age, income level, and race/ethnicity) at greatest risk for being uninsured |
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Definition
18-24 year olds uninsured 100%-less than 150% uninsured black only (out of white only, asian only) mexican |
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Term
describe the conditions that led to lack of insurance coverage for four people profiled in Frontline's Sick around America |
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Definition
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Term
explain what was demonstrated in two studies on angioplasty and coronary artery bypass graft procedures by race |
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Definition
angioplasty (best option) vs coronary artery bypass
for at least the white population, the lowest income and highest income were getting about the same angioplasty/CABG
white patients were more likely to get the procedure than the black patients |
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Term
explain what monitoring of preventable hospitalizations tells us about disparities in preventive health care |
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Definition
that those in lower socio-economic status (lower income quartile) have a higher rate of preventable hospitalizations |
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Term
name at least two factors that contribute to differences in health care between minority and non minority populations, according to the Institute of Medicine |
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Definition
patient preferences health care system |
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Term
provide evidence of black white differences in patients' perceptions of health care, and of differences in physician's perceptions of black vs white patients and explain how this might contribute to health care disparities |
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Definition
white people think that doctors treat blacks and white the same. white people think that blacks and whites receive the same kind of care. more blacks agree that racial discrimination in a doctor's office is common. and more blacks agree that hospitals have sometimes done harmful experiments on patients without their knowledge.
physicians think that whites are less likely to use ATOD, more likely to comply with medical advice, are intelligent, pleasant, and rational. |
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Term
describe the Tuskegee Syphilis study in general terms, and explain its relevance to racial differences in trust in the health care system today |
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Definition
The US govt. went out of their way to keep the poor black men in their study from getting treatment because they wanted to see the "natural history" of the disease because they wanted to see what happens if you dont treat syphilis. |
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Term
give two reasons that your family history does not determine your fate |
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Definition
just because you may carry a gene for a disease; that only increases your chances for getting the disease A LITTLE BIT.
and as long as you live a healthy lifestyle then you'll even be less likely to get the disease. |
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