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This fascinating collection shines a social epidemiological spotlight onto the key public health issues effecting sub-Saharan Africa today. Providing a timely overview of the relationship between social systems and human biology, this important book will interest students and researchers across Public Health, Medicine and African Studies.
List of contents
Part 1: Exploring the Intersections of Health, History, and Methodology: Perspectives on Social Epidemiology in Africa3. Biostatistical methods in social epidemiology.
4. Adopting qualitative research methods in understanding HIV/AIDS in Africa.
Part 2: Exploring Contexts, Challenges, and Inequalities in Infectious and Chronic Diseases Across Africa5. Socio-structural factors influencing malaria epidemiology.
6. Vaccine acceptance in Africa during the COVID-19 pandemic.
7. Social determinants of maternal health in sub-Saharan Africa.
8. Diseases of the West.
9. Sickle cell disease in Africa.
10. Social inequalities and health security in Ghana and Nigeria
Part 3: The Social Structures of Diseases and Health in Africa: Case Studies11. Partnering to eliminate leprosy in Nigeria: What do our religious leaders know? - A case study.
12. Vaccine-preventable diseases: Exploring the perspectives of the Nomadic Fulani tribe.
13. A framework to describe how sociocultural factors influence informal dementia caregiving.
15. Challenges and implications of living with Retinopathy.
16. Children on the street.
17. Health seeking behaviour for childhood diarrhoea.
About the author
John Fulton is Emeritus Professor of Social Inclusion at the University of Sunderland, which reflects his interest in social inequalities and their reproduction in education and health. He has been involved in a number of social epidemiology studies in Sub¿Saharan Africa.
Philip Emeka Anyanwu is a reader in Public Health at Warwick Medical School (WMS), University of Warwick. He is an epidemiologist with research and teaching interests in infectious disease epidemiology, social epidemiology, global health, and digital health.
Catherine Hayes is Professor of Health Professions Pedagogy and Scholarship at the University of Sunderland, UK. She is Programme Leader for the Professional Doctorate at Sunderland Campus and works predominantly with doctoral candidates undertaking PhDs, DBA, EdD, and DProf as well as those seeking to claim accreditation for doctorates by Existing Published Works and Higher Doctorates within postgraduate study.
Jonathan Ling is a former professor of Public Health at the University of Sunderland. He has a background in psychology and was the associate director for FUSE - The Centre for Translational Research in Public Health.
Summary
This fascinating collection shines a social epidemiological spotlight onto the key public health issues effecting sub-Saharan Africa today. Providing a timely overview of the relationship between social systems and human biology, this important book will interest students and researchers across Public Health, Medicine and African Studies.