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This book explores the complex and contradictory relationships between sport, medicine and health through a historically grounded analysis, informed by macro-social trends such as changing political economies and altered perceptions of the body.
Drawing upon literature in the sociology of sport, medicine and health, the book explores the underlying scientific discourse of physical activity health promotion to expose the broader political context in which medical knowledge and public policies emerge, and the incongruities between these policies and the supply of and demand for (sports) medicine. It examines the function medicine performs in the world of sport and the working practice of sports medicine personnel. At the local level, practitioners experience various context-specific barriers and forms of resistance which restrict the degree to which the profession is able to exert influence over sport. Through a series of case studies, the book explores the social construction of sports medical knowledge and the potential for medicine to create human suffering rather than well-being.
List of contents
- Sport, Medicine and Health: An Introduction
- Medicine, Health and Sport: Processes and Principles
- The Development of Sports Medicine
- Sport, Medicine and Public Health
- Medicalization, Injury and the Exercising Public
- Is Exercise Medicine? The Lived Experience of Physical Activity in Healthcare
- Sports Medicine as Occupation Medicine
- The Practice of ‘Elite’ Sports Medicine
- The Medicalization of Concussion
- Medicalization and Cardiac Screening
- Conclusion: The Medicalization of Sport
About the author
Dominic Malcolm is a Reader in the Sociology of Sport at Loughborough University, UK