Thesis
The objective of this paper is to explore current frameworks explaining the factors that influence peoples health.
Main Arguments
According to Dennis Raphael, social determinant frameworks present an adequate explanation than individual approaches. It is connected with the fact that individualism does not consider the factor of the influence of social situation. However, society and relations with it are among the main factors that determine an individuals health.
Debatable Issues
The materialistic model addresses a stepped pattern that is not shared by other researchers. According to this model, the poorer the individual is, the worse their health is. This connection is related to materialistic factors, such as working and living conditions. Some models present only the here-and-now attitude, focusing only on the current state of the individual. Nevertheless, the accumulated effects can be more important than immediate ones. The model developed by Herzman and Power (2003) offers a profound approach, describing three groups of effects: pathway, latent, and cumulative. The neo-materialistic model focuses more on the allocation of the finances among the whole society. Thus, it focuses on the impact of infrastructure that society creates, such as hospitals, libraries, and so on. Thus, according to the materialistic approach, the financial state of a country has a direct impact on the health of its citizens.
Other researchers, however, argue that psychological factors, such as the perception of the position in the society, prevail over material ones. A social comparison model focuses on the place of an individual in the social hierarchy and his attitude to it. According to the social comparison model, the wider a hierarchy is within the society, the weaker is the cohesion among the individuals. Other researches argue that, first of all, this model ignores the concrete effects of differences in financial income on health. Second, this model excludes political issues such as the economic distribution of resources among the population. Third, it reduces the effects of different social determinants on health. The model developed by Tarlov (1996) is an integration of social comparison and materialistic approaches.
|