Academic literature on the topic 'Socio-medical'

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Journal articles on the topic "Socio-medical"

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Bobdjonova, Oksana B., and Firuza M. Abdurakhmanova. "Consanguineous marriage as socio-medical problem." I.P. Pavlov Russian Medical Biological Herald 28, no. 2 (2020): 249–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.23888/pavlovj2020282249-258.

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Despite the availability of a large amount of scientific data on the negative impact of consanguineous marriages on the health of children born in such families, the significance of this problem is not decreasing in a number of countries.
 Aim. Analysis of the modern scientific base on the problem of consanguineous marriages, assessment of their impact on the development of a particular pathology in children.
 The article reflects the position of modern clinical recommendations, the results of recent studies, and some controversial and unresolved issues. Despite the emerging trend of declining consanguineous marriages in recent decades, this problem involves at least 20% of the population and dozens of countries around the world. The prevalence of consanguineous marriages in the world varies significantly, ranging from 0.1-0.4% in the United States and European countries to more than 50% in North Africa, the Middle East and West Asia. The most common form of consanguineous marriage is a marriage between first cousins. In general, rural residents who have a lower level of education are more likely to enter into consanguineous marriages.
 Conclusion. Despite a number of positive social and economic aspects of consanguineous marriages, from the point of view of genetics and medicine, it is necessary to take into account the negative impact of consanguineous marriages, which consists in an increased genetic risk to offspring and a high incidence of congenital pathology in newborns. An assessment of the socio-demographic aspects of consanguineous marriages shows that their greater prevalence is often due to poor economic conditions, lack of education, and low social security.
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Wright, V. "Socio-legal Aspects of Medical Practice." Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases 49, no. 7 (1990): 493. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/ard.49.7.493-b.

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Schutyser, K., and T. Iuris. "Socio-legal aspects of medical practice." Health Policy 14, no. 1 (1990): 76–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0168-8510(90)90366-l.

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Musaeus, Peter. "MEDICAL IDENTITY: A SOCIO-CULTURAL ANALYSIS." European Journal for Person Centered Healthcare 3, no. 2 (2015): 222. http://dx.doi.org/10.5750/ejpch.v3i2.940.

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Purpose: To examine philosophical stances underpinning medical identity and assess the conceptual relationship between physician, medical practice, and culture.Argument: Medical identity is about the ideals and moral positions that physicians take when justifying themselves. Medical identity is the study of the sociocultural paragons that conceptually underlie the phenomenology of physician’s coming to take themselves as autonomous social agents. The paper relies on Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit and investigates dilemmas pertaining to first objectivist versus subjectivist views and second hedonistic versus sentimentalist approaches to medical identity. The sociocultural philosophical analysis of medical identity can shed light on what it means conceptually for a physician to harbor beliefs associated with her being taken to be an autonomous professional.Conclusion: Medical identity should be analyzed with reference to literature, philosophy, and medical practice in order for the physician to a reflective position, which is both scientifically rational and subjectively meaningful.
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HIRASAWA, Naotake. "Socio-technical Approach to Medical Information System." Japanese journal of ergonomics 41, Supplement (2005): 24–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.5100/jje.41.supplement_24.

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Kodentsova, V. M., and D. V. Risnik. "Vitamin D: medical and socio-economic aspects." Voprosy dietologii 7, no. 2 (2017): 33–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.20953/2224-5448-2017-2-33-40.

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Rashiti, Minevere, and Kaltrina Zahiti. "Socio medical Difficulties of Strabismus In Childhood." Bangladesh Journal of Medical Science 16, no. 2 (2017): 194–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/bjms.v16i2.31937.

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Strabismus congenital or aquired deviation of eye position may lead to severe psychosocial problems in childhood and puberty. Depression, interpersonal difficulties in relationships, abuse and mistreatment in school, work, sports and play and feelings of sadness as well as inferiority might be due to deviation of one or both eyes. Consequent ophthalmic examination are necessary to detect and treat strabismus to provide affected children a healthy and happy childhood.Bangladesh Journal of Medical Science Vol.16(2) 2017 p.194-195
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Donnelly, Brian, and Margaret Ó. Hógartaigh. "Medical Archives for the Socio-Economic Historian." Irish Economic and Social History 27, no. 1 (2000): 66–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/033248930002700105.

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Coser, Rose Laub. "Socio-Medical Inquiries: Recollections, Reflections, and Reconsiderations." JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association 253, no. 5 (1985): 695. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.1985.03350290101043.

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Léger, Damien, Christian Guilleminault, Gary Bader, Emile Lévy, and Michel Paillard. "Medical and Socio-Professional Impact of Insomnia." Sleep 25, no. 6 (2002): 621–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleep/25.6.621.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Socio-medical"

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Ouyang, Wei. "Governing the Chinese medical profession : a socio-legal analysis." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/8761.

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As the first systematic and in-depth study in any language on the subject, this thesis makes original contributions by unravelling the relationship between Chinese healthcare state governance, health law and medical practitioners, and casting a spotlight on the ethically problematic medical practices raised by cases of SARS and others. More specifically, this thesis examines the role of state governance and regulation in China’s healthcare system and their impact on professional practices and ethics. The thesis addresses the issues from a social-legal perspective. It provides evidence from an integration of historical, empirical and theoretical approaches to explore the role of Chinese medics in their relations with healthcare state governance and law. It explores the character of power relations and the consequences of imbalance of power in these relations. Diagrammatic models are used throughout this work to illustrate the findings from the above approaches and to represent the changing nature of the author’s thinking about the dynamics at work in the relationships under scrutiny. The basic principle advocated in this thesis is that the effective formation and delivery of healthcare is facilitated by ethically-based systems of policy, rules and regulation. More particularly, it is argued that the roles of medical professionalism and patient control are central to good governance of healthcare in China. Set within this context, the thesis has three main goals. First, it aims to contribute to the development of theories about the relationship between the medical profession and the Communist state of China, examining the relatively powerless position of medical professionals in China as demonstrated by both historical and original empirical evidence generated by the research undertaken for this thesis. Secondly, the thesis examines the nature and extent of de-professionalisation among Chinese medical professionals. More particularly, it considers the consequences of challenges to Chinese medics’ professional autonomy which have occurred as a result of the Chinese healthcare power structure. Ultimately, it is argued that a re-structured model which places Chinese medical practitioners in a more professional and responsible role is urgently required.
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au, c. farag@optusnet com, and Christine Victoria Farag. "The anatomy of two medical archetypes : a socio-historical study of Australian doctors and their rival medical systems." Murdoch University, 2007. http://wwwlib.murdoch.edu.au/adt/browse/view/adt-MU20080625.134351.

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In this thesis it is argued that the migration of ideas and personnel from Britain to colonial Australia resulted in the reproduction of two distinctive medical archetypes, namely, the soldier/saviour and the generalist (family) physician and surgeon. These have been both conceptualised as” ideal type” carriers or expediters of two rival forms of medical professionalism. They each emerged in the ‘modern’ era as institutional products of distinctive educational processes and work practices available for doctors in 19th and 20th century Britain and Australia. While Freidson (1988) asserts one of the problems of dealing with studies of professionalism is that researchers have failed to clearly define work patterns, he could be seen as being close to Foucault (1973) whose emphasis was on the different social spaces in which practitioners worked. I show firstly that the career of the ‘imperial’ army medical officer was revived in the 19th century so that in colonial contexts they could alternate between military and civilian servicing, especially as administrators and managers in public office. The soldier/saviour was also associated with the 19th century revival of Masonic and quasi-Masonic military and religious orders, consecrated by royal sovereigns and exported to Australia. In contrast, the Scottish pedagogues and other generalist doctors coming to Australia from Britain were influenced by Edinburgh University’s Medical Faculty’s humanist traditions and design of the “modern” medical curriculum producing the generalist physician and surgeon who met community needs. Within wider imperial social relations, these generalist doctors were looked upon as ‘dissenting’ or counter-hegemonic. The aim of this thesis is to examine these archetypes in terms of their characteristics of rationalisation to analyse and understand their professional differences historically as well as in the contemporary period. The significance is that one does not often come across studies which specifically look at doctors within the same society in such terms. Furthermore, by locating them within wider hegemonic and counter-hegemonic social relations, links between ideas about medical professionalism and issues of human rights become evident. This follows the World Health Organization’s directives to treat health or medical issues and human rights as a cross-cutting research activity. To my knowledge, no study has been undertaken in Australia of the background and impact of these different traditions.
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Farag, Christine Victoria. "The anatomy of two medical archetypes : a socio-historical study of Australian doctors and their rival medical systems /." Farag, Christine Victoria (2007) The anatomy of two medical archetypes: a socio-historical study of Australian doctors and their rival medical systems. PhD thesis, Murdoch University, 2007. http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/48/.

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In this thesis it is argued that the migration of ideas and personnel from Britain to colonial Australia resulted in the reproduction of two distinctive medical archetypes, namely, the soldier/saviour and the generalist (family) physician and surgeon. These have been both conceptualised as ideal type carriers or expediters of two rival forms of medical professionalism. They each emerged in the modern era as institutional products of distinctive educational processes and work practices available for doctors in 19th and 20th century Britain and Australia. While Freidson (1988) asserts one of the problems of dealing with studies of professionalism is that researchers have failed to clearly define work patterns, he could be seen as being close to Foucault (1973) whose emphasis was on the different social spaces in which practitioners worked. I show firstly that the career of the imperial army medical officer was revived in the 19th century so that in colonial contexts they could alternate between military and civilian servicing, especially as administrators and managers in public office. The soldier/saviour was also associated with the 19th century revival of Masonic and quasi-Masonic military and religious orders, consecrated by royal sovereigns and exported to Australia. In contrast, the Scottish pedagogues and other generalist doctors coming to Australia from Britain were influenced by Edinburgh University's Medical Faculty's humanist traditions and design of the modern medical curriculum producing the generalist physician and surgeon who met community needs. Within wider imperial social relations, these generalist doctors were looked upon as dissenting or counter-hegemonic. The aim of this thesis is to examine these archetypes in terms of their characteristics of rationalisation to analyse and understand their professional differences historically as well as in the contemporary period. The significance is that one does not often come across studies which specifically look at doctors within the same society in such terms. Furthermore, by locating them within wider hegemonic and counter-hegemonic social relations, links between ideas about medical professionalism and issues of human rights become evident. This follows the World Health Organization's directives to treat health or medical issues and human rights as a cross-cutting research activity. To my knowledge, no study has been undertaken in Australia of the background and impact of these different traditions.
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Daehnke, Nadja. "Unfinished man : questioning difference through the pictorial recontextualisation of socio-medical documents." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13912.

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Bibliography: leaves 75-80.<br>In this dissertation and series of paintings I wish to focus attention on the interconnection between knowledge and power. This is commented on in relation to socio-medical disciplines. The argument proposes that knowledge is a product of vested interests and should thus not be regarded as transcendent of the context in which it is used. This study examines attempts to naturalize race, class and gender through scrutiny and analyses of the human body. Section One considers specific historical cases which illustrate the use of knowledge as a disciplinary force. Surveillance, classification, objectification and an understanding of science as neutral are identified as central to the construction of difference. These themes are investigated with regard to: Lavater's physiognomy, Charcot's understanding of hysteria, the influence of photography on nineteenth century science, eugenics, degenerationism and racial definitions in South African law from 1948 to 1994. This section draws on scholarship and research published predominantly in the areas of sociology, medical history, anthropology and ethnology. Section One is intended as a parallel text to the series of paintings produced. Section Two offers a personal interpretation of some trends, methods and materials used throughout the series of paintings. The paintings comment on the themes of classification, objectification and discrimination mentioned in Section One. The series also reflects on the mutability of knowledge and the continuing relevance of past doctrines. Primary strategies employed in the paintings are decontextualization and recontextualization of pre-existent texts, an emphasis on aesthetics and attempts to involve the viewer in the acts of looking and interpretation. Section Three consists of reproductions of the twenty paintings made for a Masters of Fine Art degree. Sources and processes used in the paintings are listed.
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Rodriguez, Santana Idaira De Las Nieves. "Essays on the influence of doctors' socio-demographic characteristics on medical specialty allocation." Thesis, University of York, 2017. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/20167/.

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Medical workforce planning is a key element of any health care system, however factors influencing medical career choice are poorly understood. This thesis contains three essays on the influence of doctors’ socio-demographic characteristics on their medical specialty in both the UK and Spain. This thesis aims at understanding the drivers of the occupational segregation between socio-demographic groups, with the objective of helping regulators and policy makers in the design of interventions aimed at reducing the undesired consequences associated with the occupational segregation. Chapter 2 constitutes a descriptive exercise of the socio-demographic composition of the new cohorts of junior doctors in the UK by analysing their distribution across specialties. The findings show large disparities in that distribution. This chapter provides a discussion of the possible sources of the observed disparities and relates the occupational segregation with the literature on statistical discrimination. Chapter 3 seeks to disentangle the origins of the outcomes observed in Chapter 2. It develops a conceptual framework that acknowledges the sequential, two-sided nature of the process and that serves as a base for the empirical analysis. The focus of the latter is the estimation of how doctors’ socio-demographic characteristics affect their application strategies and specialty choices and selectors’ valuations of candidates. Chapter 4 focuses on the Spanish resident market and explores two of the possible causes leading to the persistent gender gap in surgical specialties. The first focus is on the role of social interactions in shaping doctors’ decisions to specialize, more specifically whether female role models constitute an attractor factor for female doctors. The second analyses the functioning of the specialty allocation system and tests whether a policy change has had the unintended consequence of reducing the probability of female doctors accessing highly demanded specialties, including surgical specialties.
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Picton-Howell, Zoe. "UK paediatricians' medical decision-making for severely disabled children : a socio-legal analysis." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/33061.

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This thesis aims to illuminate how paediatricians in the United Kingdom (UK) make difficult medical decisions when treating severely disabled children with complex health conditions. In particular, it examines the part played, if any, by law, rights, and ethics in those decisions. After drawing on jurisprudence of the English and European Human Rights Court, together with existing scholarship, to analyse the doctors' decision making, this thesis adopts a legal consciousness theoretical approach. Using this it looks at how the paediatricians make sense of and conceptualise law when making these decisions. It examines how decisions are, by the paediatricians' own accounts, commonly made at present and what the paediatricians say about how they and their colleagues make such decisions. This thesis addresses the following research questions: i) Which decisions do UK paediatricians find particularly difficult when working with disabled children and what makes those decisions particularly difficult? ii) What factors do UK paediatricians take into consideration when making difficult decisions for disabled children and what weight do they put on those factors? iii) What formal education in law, rights, and ethics have the doctors received and to what extent, if any, can we discern how this education impacts on their difficult decisions for disabled children? iv) How do UK paediatricians construct and understand the law, rights, and ethics when making their difficult decisions? This thesis makes an original contribution, being the first in-depth socio-legal study examining UK paediatricians' medical decision-making for severely disabled children, by identifying two distinct styles paediatricians adopt when approaching best interest decisions, and by recommending a new category of legal consciousness. It concludes by recommending research and changes both in doctors' training and approach to best interest decision-making to address the current challenges paediatricians describe facing when deciding for severely disabled children.
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Chatterton, Christopher. "Metabolic Syndrome : the construction of a 'new' medical problem and the socio-ethical consequences." Thesis, Cardiff University, 2014. http://orca.cf.ac.uk/58973/.

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The work presented here is a sociological and bioethical analysis of the medical condition known as Syndrome X/Metabolic Syndrome. The term is a recent name given to a group of cardiac/diabetic risk factors that include high cholesterol, insulin resistance, obesity, high blood pressure and high fat levels in the blood (Garber 2004). Interest in the topic was reawakened by Reaven (1988) who first coined the term ‘Syndrome X’ to describe a cluster of risk factors that he believed was linked to insulin resistance. In recent years the number of ‘new’ diseases that have been detected and identified by medicine has increased rapidly, with examples such as clinical obesity and infertility. Commentators have speculated as to why this may be happening and one suggestion is that our lives are becoming ever more medicalised (Moynihan and Smith 2002). The thesis consists of three main strands. The first strand is a sociological analysis of the Metabolic Syndrome concept and how it came to be constructed as a medical condition, with particular emphasis on whether the syndrome represents an example of the medicalisation of obesity. The second strand looks at the relationship between sociology and bioethics, and whether research from the former can help inform the ethical debate in the other. In this regard, I hope to show in this thesis that it is possible to conduct social and bioethical analyses side by side, and that these can be complementary and give you a richer understanding of a topic. The third strand is a discussion of the main ethical issues surrounding this ‘new’ diagnosis, with particular emphasis on the issue of blame and responsibility in relation to this condition.
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Jansen, Friso Johannes. "The shifting sands of evidence : a socio-legal enquiry into the development of medical guidelines." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2017. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:efd9b784-3df7-400e-bb0a-8f898578bc91.

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Medical guidelines on the same medical condition differ between England and the Netherlands. These guidelines are referred to as evidence-based because they are supposedly based on a systematic searching for and appraisal of medical studies to drive recommendations for appropriate care for specific clinical circumstances. This comparative study interrogates what causes these differences and similarities between guidelines and tries to uncover the mechanisms behind the development of medical practice guidelines. Four case studies, on lower back pain and on type 2 diabetes in both countries, are used to provide a detailed empirical account of the development of medical guidelines. Interviews with guideline developers are combined with a detailed analysis of available guideline documents. The overarching finding of this thesis is that medical evidence plays a more limited and nuanced role in guideline construction than might be expected and that guidelines are manifestations of professional (self-) regulation. Importantly, the research also finds that institutions shape guidelines in a multitude of ways. This study has endeavoured to add to a more nuanced understanding of evidence within the literature: conceptualising evidence as part of a process of a social and institutional construction. This construction is used within a collaborative and communicative process aimed at creating 'objective facts'. Contrary to existing scholarship, this thesis argues that evidence merely informs the understanding of members of guideline groups while a range of economic, cultural, institutional, and political factors, that together form cognitive frames, provide the driving force behind the development of guidelines. Institutional factors have shown to be essential elements in guideline development, influencing all aspects of development through institutional cultures of practice. This study concludes that calling guidelines evidence-based is an important rhetorical instrument, which helps to conceal and legitimize some of the normative choices that are inherent in guideline making.
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Moula, Alireza. "Population-based empowerment practice in immigrant communities : a socio-medical study of Iranian families in Sweden /." Linköping : Linköpings universitet, 2005. http://www.bibl.liu.se/liupubl/disp/disp2005/med887s.pdf.

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Roth, Christian, Rudolf Berger, and Michael Kuhn. "The role of the socio-economic environment on medical outcomes after ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction." Springer Nature, 2019. http://epub.wu.ac.at/6982/1/document.pdf.

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Background: According to the World Health Organization, coronary artery disease (CAD), including ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), is the most common cause of death worldwide as well as in Europe and Austria. There is valid data on the impact of conventional risk factors on the medical outcomes for STEMI patients. However, only few studies examine the role of the socio-economic environment for medical outcomes. The main task of this study is to investigate if the socio-economic environment of patients who underwent percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) after STEMI has an impact on the distribution of risk factors and medical outcomes. Methods: The study focuses on the population of the City of Vienna, Austria, and includes 870 STEMI patients, who underwent PCI at the General Hospital of Vienna (AKH Wien) between 2008 and 2012. The following data were collected: conventional risk factors (hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, overweight, smoking, family history and vascular disease) and socio-economic indicators of the patient's residential district (number of residents, income pre-tax, residents per general practitioner, residents per internal specialist, compulsory education only, academic degree and rate of unemployment). Cox regressions were performed to evaluate the impact of socio-economic environment and conventional risk factors on survival. Results: Most of the conventional risk factors show a significant difference between deceased and surviving patients. The study revealed significant differences across districts in relation to the socio-economic background of STEMI patients. Surprisingly, medical outcomes, as measured by the survival of patients, are significantly related to a patient's district of residence ( p -Value = 0.028) but not in a systematic way as far as the socio-economic environment of These districts is concerned. Conclusions: The study provides intuitive evidence for a hitherto understudied Central European context on the link between socio-economic environment and conventional risk factors at population level and the link between conventional risk factors and survival both at the population at the individual level. While this is in line with previous evidence and suggestive of the incorporation of measures of socio-economic status (SES) into policy & guidelines toward the management of CAD, more data on the SES - STEMI nexus are needed at individual level.
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Books on the topic "Socio-medical"

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Schildmann, Jan. Human medical research: Ethical, legal and socio-cultural aspects. Springer Verlag, 2012.

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Schildmann, Jan. Human Medical Research: Ethical, Legal and Socio-Cultural Aspects. Springer Basel, 2012.

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Gumede, M. V. Alcohol use & abuse in South Africa: A socio-medical problem. Reach Out Publishers, 1995.

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Meintjes, Graeme. Manhood at a price: Socio-medical perspectives on Xhosa traditional circumcision. Institute of Social and Economic Research, Rhodes University, 1998.

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Barnor, M. A. A socio-medical adventure in Ghana: Autobiography of Dr. M.A. Barnor. Vieso Universal, 2001.

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Uberoi, Patricia. The woman's body in midlife: Socio-cultural and medical perspectives from South Asia. Institute of Economic Growth, 2001.

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Bioethics and the law: Medical, socio-legal and philosophical directions for a brave new world. University Press of America, 1993.

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Chinery, W. A. Impact of socio-economic development on populations of some parasites and vectors in Ghana: Its medical implications. Ghana Universities Press, 1990.

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The relationship between race and the prevalence of hypertension: A sociological analysis of a critical socio-medical problem in America today. The Edwin Mellen Press, 2014.

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Bracci, Fabio, and Giuseppe Cardamone. Presenze: Migranti e accesso ai servizi socio-sanitari. FrancoAngeli, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Socio-medical"

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Ratanakul, Pinit. "Socio-Medical Aspects of Abortion in Thailand." In Buddhism and Abortion. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-14178-4_4.

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Emmerich, Nathan. "Medical Ethics Education from a Socio-Cultural Perspective." In SpringerBriefs in Ethics. Springer International Publishing, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-00485-3_5.

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Kristensen, Dorthe Brogård. "Illness Stories, Medical Choices and Socio-Political Process." In Patients, Doctors and Healers. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-97031-8_1.

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Kyed, Morten. "Masculinity, Socio-emotional Skills and Marginalization Amongst Emergency Medical Technicians." In Marginalized Masculinities. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315229300-6.

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Klemm, Paul, Lisa Frauenstein, David Perlich, Katrin Hegenscheid, Henry Völzke, and Bernhard Preim. "Clustering Socio-Demographic and Medical Attribute Data in Cohort Studies." In Informatik aktuell. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-54111-7_36.

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Smith, George P. "Toward a Good Death: A Socio-legal, Ethical, and Medical Challenge." In Palliative Care and End-of-Life Decisions. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137377395_7.

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Brucksch, Susanne. "Conclusions on Socio-Technical Settings in Medical Contexts from the Locale of Japan." In Humans and Devices in Medical Contexts. Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-33-6280-2_12.

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Purin, Barbara, and Enrico Maria Piras. "Personal Health Records among Institutions, Medical Records, and Patient Wisdom: A Socio-technical Approach." In Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences, Social Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-23635-8_19.

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Alur, Sivakumar. "Smile Train India: A Social Marketer Targeting Cleft Lip/Palate as a Socio-Medical Issue." In Springer Texts in Business and Economics. Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-13020-6_15.

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Davison, Constança, Teresa Patrone Cotrim, and Susana Gonçalves. "Analysis of Socio-Demographic, Lifestyle and Psychosocial Risk Factors Among a Sample of Portuguese Emergency Medical Technicians." In Health and Social Care Systems of the Future: Demographic Changes, Digital Age and Human Factors. Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-24067-7_8.

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Conference papers on the topic "Socio-medical"

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Ferrati, F., R. Bortoletto, E. Menegatti, and E. Pagello. "Socio-economic impact of medical lower-limb Exoskeletons." In 2013 IEEE Workshop on Advanced Robotics and its Social Impacts (ARSO). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/arso.2013.6705500.

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Yekhalov, V. V., O. V. Kravets, and D. A. Krishtafor. "Modern socio-psychological portrait of a medical intern." In SCIENTIFIC PROGRESS OF MEDICINE AND PHARMACY OF THE EU COUNTRIES. Baltija Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30525/978-9934-26-075-9-36.

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Bezrukova, G. A. "Medical-Demographic And Socio-Hygienic Aspects Of Agricultural Labor Resources." In International Conference on Economic and Social Trends for Sustainability of Modern Society. European Publisher, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2020.10.03.180.

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Kosyh, Nikolay, Elena Levkova, and Sergey Savin. "ANALYSIS OF THE INFLUENCE OF MEDICAL AND SOCIAL FACTORS ON MENTAL HEALTH OF RESIDENTS OF THE KHABAROVSK REGION." In XIV International Scientific Conference "System Analysis in Medicine". Far Eastern Scientific Center of Physiology and Pathology of Respiration, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/conferencearticle_5fe01d9d489b87.90758413.

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The work is devoted to a systematic study of the influence of medical, social and socio-demographic factors on the mental health of the population of the Khabarovsk Territory. An approach has been developed to determine the psychological, clinical, medical, social, ethnocultural and socio-psychological patterns of the formation of risk factors for the spread of socially significant diseases using the example of depressive disorders.
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5

Leonova, I. S., L. N. Zakharova, and A. I. Makhalin. "Organizational culture and socio-psychological age of female personnel of medical institutions." In INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC AND PRACTICAL ONLINE CONFERENCE. Знание-М, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.38006/907345-50-8.2020.496.505.

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The results of an empirical study of the socio-psychological age of female doctors of clinics that have successfully entered into the innovative format of development and clinics experiencing many years of difficulty in introducing innovations are presented. It is shown that the organizational culture of innovative clinics is characterized by a pronounced adhocratic component, and a clan-hierarchical model dominates in problematic clinics, therefore, the introduction of innovations is carried out by inconsistent administrative methods typical of this model. As a result, the personnel experiences a high level of stress, which makes them feel unwell, tired, it rejects innovations and strives to maximize the clan component of the organizational culture as a means of protection against the stress of innovative changes. The results are an «older» socio-psychological age and a low level of labour involvement, which, in general, shows the correspondence of the characteristics of the female personnel of problematic clinics to gender stereotypes. In innovative clinics, female personnel feel more alert, healthy and younger, shares, regardless of the chronological age, innovative values traditionally associated with younger ages, is personally involved in the work process and does not fall under the characteristics of gender stereotypes. It is shown that the socio-psychological age of female personnel and the value of readiness for innovation depend on the type of organizational culture. In the future, female doctors are oriented towards an innovative way of market development of their clinics, but not in the managerial paradigm that is currently being implemented by management. Successful management of the socio-psychological age and the introduction of innovation involve the abandonment of administrative methods, the prevention of the stress of organizational change and the establishment of innovative values as the basis of a new organizational culture.
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6

Kashirina, Anna M. "Problems Of Open Data Sources Analysis For Socio-Economic And Medical Research." In International Conference on Economic and Social Trends for Sustainability of Modern Society. European Publisher, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2020.10.03.184.

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Bondarenko, V. A. "Medical Tourism As A Driver Of Socio-Economic Development Of The Economy." In International Conference on Economic and Social Trends for Sustainability of Modern Society. European Publisher, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2020.10.03.68.

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Zakharova, Liudmila Nikolaevna. "Ogranizational Culture And Socio-Psychological Age of Medical Female Personnel: Management Opportunities." In Personal and Regulatory Resources in Achieving Educational and Professional Goals in the Digital Age. European Publisher, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2020.10.04.24.

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Sendelj, Ramo, Ivana Ognjanovic, Elske Ammenwerth, and Werner Hackl. "Towards semantically enabled development of service-oriented architectures for integration of socio-medical data." In 2016 5th Mediterranean Conference on Embedded Computing (MECO). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/meco.2016.7525687.

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Yurievich, Shvets Yuri. "Correlation Between Socio-Economic Consequences and the External Effects Management of Regional Medical Systems." In 2020 5th International Conference on Humanities Science and Society Development (ICHSSD 2020). Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.200727.077.

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