Jb. Mckinlay, SOME CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE SOCIAL SYSTEM TO GENDER INEQUALITIES IN HEART-DISEASE, Journal of health and social behavior, 37(1), 1996, pp. 1-26
Epidemiological understanding is incomplete if social system influence
s on statistical rates are not appropriately recognized. To the tradit
ional epidemiological triumvirate of agent, host, and environment, a f
ourth influence must now be added-contributions from the social system
(like government reimbursement policies, organizational priorities, a
nd the variable behavior of providers). This paper has two sections: t
he first builds a progressively more complex model (from simple reific
ation, through environmental and personal attributes, to social system
influences) to depict the relative contribution of diverse influences
to the social production of ''facts.'' The second section considers h
ow social system influences affect health statistics-most emphasis is
given to the contribution of health provider behavior (using the widel
y accepted gender inequality in heart disease as an example). Data fro
m a wide range of studies (employing seven different research methods)
are consistent with an underlying thesis-that the gender difference i
n heart disease is as much a function of how providers and the system
respond as it is of the biophysiology of patients and how they react t
o events. The incorporation of system influences permits the developme
nt of an epidemiological imagination, ol the ability to link intimate
health experiences with more remote social-structural influences.