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ESA-MEDSOC  May 2012

ESA-MEDSOC May 2012

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Subject:

New book

From:

Ellen Annandale <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Ellen Annandale <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Thu, 3 May 2012 20:58:32 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (53 lines)

New Book:

Alternative and Bio-Medicine in Israel: Boundaries and Bridges
 
Judith Shuval and Emma Averbuch

SBN 978-1-93623-86-5 (cloth) $72.00
245 pp., January 2012

Series: Israel: Society, Culture and History

Topic Areas: Alternative Medicine, Health Care Policy, Israel, International Health Care Systems
 

Summary: This book explores the macro and micro social contexts in which alternative and bio-medicine co-exist in Israel. It includes a history of alternative health care in Israel and analysis of current policies and dilemmas regarding different forms of health care. It provides an in-depth analysis of medical professionals who have added alternative health care to their repertoire of professional skills in their practice settings in hospitals and community clinics. The heterogeneity of patient populations in Israel makes it possible to explore attitudes of different cultural groups toward alternative health care: these include Jewish immigrants from different countries as well as Bedouin and other Arab groups. Since alternative medicine is a growing part of the overall health care system in many countries, the book provides insights gained from the Israeli experience regarding its co-existence along with conventional medicine - to a broad spectrum of health professionals, policy makers and laypersons.

Author: Judith T. Shuval (Ph.D. Harvard University) is professor emerita at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where she holds the Rose Chair in the Sociology of Health. She has served as chair of the Israel Sociological Association, as a member of the Executive Committee of the European Society for Medical Sociology, on the executive committee of the Research Committee on the Sociology of Health of the International Sociological Association, and on the editorial board of Social Science and Medicine and Sociology of Health and Illness. She received the Israel Prize for the Social Sciences. Her publications include Social Dimensions of Health: The Israeli Experience and Immigrant Physicians: Former Soviet Doctors in Israel, Canada, and the United States.

Emma Averbuch (PhD Hebrew University) teaches sociology of health in the Braun School of Public Health, Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School in Jerusalem. She coordinates activities regarding coping with inequality in health at the Israel Ministry of Health.


Alternative and Bio-Medicine in Israel: Boundaries and Bridges

Reviews:

No authors are better positioned than Shuval and Averbuch to explore the boundaries and bridges between alternative and biomedicine. They have spent over ten years examining the ways in which these two disparate forms of health care have managed to co-exist in Israel.

With a solid theoretical framework and historical perspective, the book explores the diverse forms of co-existence that have emerged in their country between complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) and the biomedical model. These include studies of nurses and midwives practicing CAM, as well as physicians who regularly incorporate it into their treatments. Other Israeli colleagues contribute significantly to the empirical research.

The book will be a critical source for scholars seeking to understand the social processes underlying the current challenges to the previous dominance of the medical profession and the transformation of the health care system. 

—Merrijoy Kelner
Department of Sociology
University of Toronto

\

It is indisputable that Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) is more popular today than ever. In light of the public debate within the Bio-Medical community about the need to regulate CAM and teach about it in medical schools, this comprehensive, well-written book provides a sociological view of CAM, its scope of practice in Israel and the Western world, and the developing co-existence of CAM and Bio-Medicine. This extensive work, which includes a historical perspective of CAM in Israel, case studies of physicians and nurses practicing CAM, patients' views, and a summarizing chapter on "Medicalization and Camification," is the best and most comprehensive description of the boundaries and bridges between Bio-Medicine and CAM that I have come across. It should be required reading for all healthcare professionals and for the wider public trying to navigate between conventional and CAM healthcare providers.

                                                                                           Professor Jonathan Halevy,
                                                                                           General Director,
                                                                                           Shaarei Tzedek Medical Center, 
                                                                                           Jerusalem  

 ORDER: $72            
Academic Studies Press
28 Montfern Ave
Brighton, MA 02135r.O.B. Project
Phone # 617 782 6290
Fax # 617 782 6290
[log in to unmask]
www.academicstudiespress.com

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