198
Views
8
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

State of the Art: A Decade of Health Sociology in Review

&
Pages 122-144 | Received 11 Apr 2004, Accepted 11 Aug 2004, Published online: 18 Dec 2014

References

  • Abbott-Chapman, J. and Denholm, C. (1997) ‘Adolescent risk taking and the romantic ethic: HIV/AIDS awareness among year 11 and 12 students’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 33(3): 306-21.
  • Achanfuo-Yeboah, D. (1995) ‘Problems of Indigenous health research: issues for Australia’ Australian Journal of Social Research 1(1): 3-19.
  • Adamson, B. J., Kenny, D. T. and Wilson-Barnett, J. (1995) ‘The impact of perceived medical dominance on the workplace satisfaction of Australian and British nurses’ Journal of Advanced Nursing 21(1): 172-83.
  • Allen, K. (2002) ‘The social space(s) of rural women’ Rural Society 12(1): 27-44.
  • Allotey, P. (1998) ‘Travelling with “excess baggage”: health problems of refugee women in Western Australia’ Women and Health 28(1): 63-81.
  • Allotey, P., Manderson, L. and Grover, S. (2001) ‘The politics of female genital surgery in displaced communities’ Critical Public Health 11(3): 189-201.
  • Anderson, I. (1995) ‘Bodies, disease and the problem of Foucault’ Social Analysis 37: 67-81.
  • Anderson, I. (2001) ‘Aboriginal society and health: critical issues demand what from sociologists?’ Health Sociology Review 10(2): 5-20.
  • Anderson, W. (1992) ‘The reasoning of the strongest: the polemics of skill and science in medical diagnosis’ Social Studies of Science 22(4): 653-84.
  • Bains, J. (1998) ‘From reviving the living to raising the dead: the making of cardiac resuscitation’ Social Science and Medicine 47(9): 1341-49.
  • Baker, K. and Donelly, M. (2001) ‘The social experiences of children with disability and the influence of environment: a framework for intervention’ Disability and Society 16(1): 71-85.
  • Baldock, Cora (2003) ‘Long-distance migrants and family support: a Dutch case study’ Health Sociology Review 12(1): 45-54.
  • Bammer, G. and Martin, B. (1992) ‘Repetition strain injury in Australia: medical knowledge, social movement, and de facto partisanship’ Social Problems 29(3): 219-37.
  • Bartholomew, R. E. (1998) ‘The medicalization of exotic deviance: a sociological perspective on epidemic koro’ Transcultural Psychiatry 35(1): 5-38.
  • Bartos, M.l and McDonald, K. (2000) ‘HIV as identity, experience or career’ AIDS Care 12(3): 299-306.
  • Bashford, A. (1998) ‘Quarantine and the imagining of the Australian nation’ Health 2(4): 387-402.
  • Bashford, A. (1999) ‘Epidemic and governmentality: smallpox in Sydney, 1881’ Critical Public Health 9(4): 301-16.
  • Baum, F. (1995) ‘Researching public health: behind the qualitative-quantitative methodological debate’ Social Science and Medicine 40(4): 459-68.
  • Baum, F. (1998) The New Public Health: An Australian Perspective. South Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
  • Baume, P.and Clinton, M. (1997) ‘Social and cultural patterns of suicide in young people in rural Australia’ Australian Journal of Rural Health 5(3): 115-20.
  • Beaglehole, R.and Davis, P. (1992) ‘Setting national health goals and targets in the context of a fiscal crisis: the politics of social choice in New Zealand’ International Journal of Health Services 22(3): 417-28.
  • Bombardieri, D. and Easthope, G.(2000) ‘Convergence between orthodox and alternative medicine: A theoretical elaboration and empirical test’ Health 4(4): 479-94.
  • Boreham, P., Dickerson, M. and Harley, B. (1996) ‘What are the social costs of gambling?: The case of the Queensland machine gaming industry’ Australian Journal of Social Issues 31(4): 425-42.
  • Boreham, P., Hall, R. and Leet, M. (1996) ‘Labour and citizenship: The development of welfare state regimes’ Journal of Public Policy 16(2): 203-27.
  • Boulton-Lewis, G., Pillay, H., Wilss, L. and Lewis, D. (2002) ‘Conceptions of health and illness held by Australian Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, and Papua New Guinea health science students’ Australian Journal of Primary Health - Interchange 8(2): 9-16.
  • Braunack-Mayer, A. (2001) ‘Casuistry as bioethical method: an empirical perspective’ Social Science and Medicine 53(1): 71-81.
  • Breaden, K. (2003) ‘You’ll never hear them say “you’re cured”’: the language of tragedy in cancer care’ Health Sociology Review 12(2): 120-8.
  • Bricher, G. (2000) ‘Disabled people, health professionals and the social model of disability: can there be a research relationship?’ Disability and Society 15(5): 781-93.
  • Broom, A. (2002) ‘Contested territories: the construction of boundaries between ‘alternative’ and ‘conventional’ cancer treatments’ New Zealand Sociology 17(2): 215-34.
  • Broom, D. (1998) ‘By women, for women: the continuing appeal of women’s health centres’ Women and Health 28(1): 5-22.
  • Broom, D. Byrne, M. and Petkovic, L. (1992) ‘Off cue: women who play pool’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 28(2): 175-91.
  • Broom, D. and Woodward, R. (1996) ‘Medicalisation reconsidered: toward a collaborative approach to care’ Sociology of Health and Illness 18(3): 357-78.
  • Broom, D. and Treacher, G. (2003) ‘Representing gender in publications for diabetics’ Health Sociology Review 12(1):55-67.
  • Brown, J., Chapman, S. and Lupton, D. (1996) ‘Infinitesimal risk as public health crisis: news media coverage of a doctor-patient HIV contact tracing investigation’ Social Science and Medicine 43(12): 1685-95.
  • Browne, J. and Minichiello, V. (1994) ‘The condom: why more people don’t put it on’ Sociology of Health and Illness 16(2): 229-51.
  • Browne, J. and Minichiello, V. (1995) ‘The social meanings behind male sex work: implications for sexual interactions’ The British Journal of Sociology 46(4): 598-622.
  • Browne, J. and Minichiello, V. (1996) ‘The social and work context of commercial sex between men: a research note’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 32(1): 86-92.
  • Browning, C. J. and Thomas, S. (2001) ‘Community values and preferences in transplantation organ allocation decisions’ Social Science and Medicine 52(6): 853-61.
  • Bull, M. (1996) ‘Power and addiction: the making of the modern addict’ Australian Journal of Social Issues 31(2): 191-208.
  • Cant, R. (1992) ‘Friendship, neighboring and the isolated family: the case of families with disabled children’ Journal of Sociology of the Family 22(2): 31-50.
  • Carden, P. (2001) ‘Rising from the dead: delimiting stigma in the Australian funeral industry’ Health Sociology Review 10(2):79-87.
  • Chapman, S. and Lupton, D. (1994) The Fight for Public Health: Principles and Practice of Media Advocacy London: British Medical Journal.
  • Chapman, S., Lupton, D. and McCarthy, S. (1994) “Very good punter-speak”: how journalists construct the news of public health Sydney, NSW: Centre for Health Advocacy and Media Research.
  • Cheek, J. (1997) ‘(Con)textualizing toxic shock syndrome: selected media representations of the emergence of a health phenomenon 1979-1995’ Health 1(2): 183-203.
  • Cheek, J. and Rudge, T.(1994) ‘Webs of documentation: the discourse of case notes’ Australian Journal of Communication 21(2): 41-52.
  • Clarke, D. (1999) ‘Depression as a function of life events, social support and sociocultural factors: A New Zealand study’ Social Research and Social Change 6: 53-76.
  • Clarke, E. (2003) ‘Social capital: one source of wellness in older adults?’ Health Sociology Review 12(2): 163-70.
  • Collyer, F. (1994) ‘Sex-change surgery: an “unacceptable innovation?” The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 30(1): 3-19.
  • Collyer, F. (1996) ‘Frankenstein meets the invisible man: science, medicine and a theory of invention’ Electronic Journal of Sociology 2(2).
  • Collyer, F. and White, K. (1997) ‘Enter the market: competition, regulation and hospital funding in Australia’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 33(3): 344-63.
  • Colomeda, L. and Wenzel, E. (2000) ‘Medicine keepers: issues in Indigenous health’ Critical Public Health 10(2): 243-56.
  • Colquhoun, D. and Kellehear, A. (eds.) (1996) Health Research in Practice: Personal Experiences, Public Issues Melbourne: Chapman and Hall.
  • Colquhoun, D. and Kellehear, A. (eds.) (1993) Health Research in Practice: Political, Ethical, and Methodological Issues New York: Chapman and Hall.
  • Connell, R. W., Davis, M. D. and Dowsett, G. W. (1993) ‘A bastard of a life: homosexual desire and practice among men in working-class milieux’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 29(1): 112-35.
  • Cook, C. and Easthope, G. (1996) ‘Symptoms of a crisis? Trust, risk and medicine’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 32(3): 85-98.
  • Coulson, I.. Marino, R. and Minichiello, V. (2001) ‘Older people’s knowledge and practice about lifestyle behaviours that may prevent vascular dementia’ Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics 33:273-85.
  • Cox, D. (1999) ‘Normal science? Texts for teaching the sociology of health and illness’ Sociology of Health and Illness 21(4): 485-93.
  • Craig, D. (2000) ‘Practical logics: the shapes and lessons of popular medical knowledge and practice-examples from Vietnam and Indigenous Australia’ Social Science and Medicine 51(5): 703-11.
  • Crompvoets, S. (2003) ‘Reconstructing the self: breast cancer and the post-surgical body’ Health Sociology Review 12(2): 137-45.
  • Cross, A. (2002) ‘Playing with “peng” in Taiji Boxing’ Health Sociology Review 11(1-2): 53-60.
  • Crouch, M. and Manderson, L. (1995) ‘The social life of bonding theory’ Social Science and Medicine 41(6): 837-44.
  • Crouch, M. and McKenzie, H. (2000) ‘Social realities of loss and suffering following mastectomy’ Health 4(2): 196-215.
  • Cunneen, C. (2001) ‘Assessing the outcomes of the royal commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody’ Health Sociology Review 10(2): 53-64.
  • D’Abbs, P. (2001) ‘Silence of the sociologists: Indigenous alcohol use, harm minimisation and social control’ Health Sociology Review 10(2): 33-52.
  • Daly, J. (1996) ‘Qualitative research methods’ Journal of Health Services and Research Policy 1(3): 165-6.
  • Daly, J. (1995) ‘Caught in the web: the social construction of menopause as disease’ Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology 13(2): 115-26.
  • Daly, J., Guillemin, M. and Hill, S. (2001) Technologies and health: critical compromises. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
  • Daly, J. and McDonald, I. (1992) ‘Covering your back: strategies for qualitative research in clinical settings’ Qualitative Health Research 2(4): 416-38.
  • Daly, J. and McDonald, I. (1997) ‘Cardiac disease construction on the borderland’ Social Science and Medicine 44(7): 1043-49.
  • Daly, J., McDonald, I. and Willis, E. (1992) Researching Health Care: Designs, Dilemmas, Disciplines. London: Routledge.
  • Daly, J. (1991) ‘Does a constructivist view require epistemological relativism?: a response to Turnbull’ Social Studies of Science 21(3): 568-71.
  • Daniel, A., Burn, R and Horarik, S (1999) ‘Patients’ complaints about medical practice’ Medical Journal of Australia 170: 598-602.
  • Davis, A. and George, J. (1993) States of Health: Health and Illness in Australia, (2nd Editorial), Pymble, NSW: Harper Educational.
  • Davis, P. (ed.) (1992) For Health or Profit?: Medicine, the Pharmaceutical Industry and the State in New Zealand Auckland: Oxford University Press
  • Davis, P. (1996) Contested Ground: Public Purpose and Private Interest in the Regulation of Prescription Drugs. NY: Oxford University Press.
  • Davis, P. and Ashton, T. (eds.) (2001) Health and Public Policy in New Zealand Auckland: Oxford University Press.
  • Davis, P. and Dew, K. (eds.) (1999) Health and Society in Aotearoa New Zealand Auckland: Oxford University Press.
  • Davis, P., Gribben, B., Scott, A. and Lay-Yee, R. (2000) ‘The “supply hypothesis” and medical practice variation in primary care: testing economic and clinical models of interpractitioner variation’ Social Science and Medicine 50(3): 407-18.
  • Davis, P. and Howden-Chapman, P. (1996) ‘Translating research findings into health policy’ Social Science and Medicine 43(5): 865-72.
  • Davis, P. (ed.) (1996), Intimate details and vital statistics: AIDS, sexuality and the social order in new Zealand Auckland: Auckland University Press.
  • Dawson, M., Gifford, S. and Amezquita, R. (2000) ‘Donde hay doctor?: folk and cosmopolitan medicine for sexual health among Chilean women living in Australia’ Health and Sexuality 2(1): 51-68.
  • Dawson, M. and Gifford, S. (2001) ‘Narratives, culture and sexual health: personal life experiences of Salvadorean and Chilean women living in Melbourne, Australia’ Health 5(4): 403-23.
  • de Visser, R., Ezzy, D. and Bartos, M. (2000) ‘Comorbidity and coinfection among people living with HIV/AIDS: the experiences of an Australian sample’ Australian Journal of Primary Health – Interchange 6(1): 48-56.
  • Dew, K. (1997) ‘Limits on the utilization of alternative therapies by doctors in New Zealand: a problem of boundary maintenance’ Australian Journal of Social Issues 32(2): 181-97.
  • Dew, K. (1999) ‘Epidemics, panic and power: representations of measles and measles vaccines’ Health 3(4): 379-98.
  • Dew, K.(1999) ‘National identity and controversy: New Zealand’s clean green image and pentachlorophenol’ Health and Place 5(1): 45-57.
  • Dew, K. (2000) ‘Apostasy to orthodoxy: debates before a commission of inquiry into chiropractic’ Sociology of Health and Illness 22(3): 310-30.
  • Dew, K. (2000) ‘Deviant insiders: medical acupuncturists in New Zealand’ Social Science and Medicine 50(12): 1785-95.
  • Dew, K. (2001) ‘Modes of practice and models of science in medicine’ Health 5(1): 93-111.
  • Dew, K. and Kirkman, A. (2002) Sociology of Health in New Zealand. Auckland: Oxford University Press.
  • Dew, K. and Lloyd, M. (1997) ‘Accounting for the ICI fire: partial connections between lay and expert knowledge’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 33(3): 394-402.
  • Douglass, J., Aroni, R. and Goeman, D. (2002) ‘A qualitatiave study of action plans for asthma’ British Medical Journal 324: 1003-05.
  • Dowsett, G. and McInnes, D. (1996) ‘Gay community, AIDS agencies and the HIV epidemic in Adelaide: theorising “post AIDS”’ Social Alternatives 15(4): 29-32.
  • Dowsett, G. (1999) ‘The indeterminate macrosocial: new traps for old players in HIV AIDS social research’ Health and Sexuality 1(1): 95-102.
  • Dowsett, G. (1996) ‘I’ll show you mine if you’ll show me yours’ Reproductive Health Matters 7: 19-24.
  • Dowsett, G. (1996) Practicing Desire: Homosexual Sex in the Era of AIDS. CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Duckett, S. (2000) The Australian Health Care System. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
  • Easteal, P. (1994) ‘Homicide-suicides between adult sexual intimates: an Australian study’ Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior 24(2): 140-51.
  • Easthope, G., Gill, G., Beilby, J. and Tranter, B. (1999) ‘Acupuncture in Australian general practice: patient characteristics’ Medical Journal of Australia 170: 259-62.
  • Easthope, G. and Lynch, P. P. (1992) ‘Voluntary agencies dealing with drug and alcohol misusers: a comparison of three surveys conducted in London, Scotland, and Tasmania’ The International Journal of the Addictions 27(12): 1401-11.
  • Easthope, G., Tranter, B. and Gill, G. (2000) ‘General practitioners’ attitudes toward complementary therapies’ Social Science and Medicine 51(10): 1555-61.
  • Easthope, G., Tranter, B. and Gill, G. (2000) ‘Normal medical practice of referring patients for complementary therapies among Australian general practitioners’ Complementary Therapies in Medicine 8(4): 226-33.
  • Easthope, G. (1993) ‘Perceptions of the causes of drug use in a series of articles in the International Journal of the Addictions’ The International Journal of the Addictions 28(6): 559-69.
  • Easthope, G. (1993) ‘The response of orthodox medicine to the challenge of alternative medicine in Australia’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 29(3): 289-301.
  • Eastwood, H. (2000) ‘Why are Australian GPs using alternative medicine? Postmodernisation, consumerism and the shift towards holistic health’ Journal of Sociology 36(2): 133-56.
  • Eckermann, L. (2000) ‘Gendering indicators of health and well-being: is quality of life gender neutral?’ Social Indicators Research 52(1): 29-54.
  • Edwards, J. (1994) ‘Private cancer, public cancer: guilt and innocence in popular literature’ Australian Journal of Communication 21(2): 1-13.
  • Edwards, J., Cheers, B. and Graham, L. (2003) ‘Social change and social capital in Australia: a solution for contemporary problems?’ Health Sociology Review 1(10) September.
  • Elliott, A. and Chapman, S. (2000) ‘”Heroin hell their own making’: Construction of heroin users in the Australian press 1992-97’ Drug and Alcohol Review 19(2): 191-201.
  • Ewan, C., Lowy, E. and Reid, J. (1991) ‘“Falling out of culture”: The effects of repetition strain injury on sufferers’ roles and identity’ Sociology of Health and Illness 13(2): 168-92.
  • Ezzy, D., de Visser, R. and Bartos, M. (1999) ‘Poverty, disease progression and employment among people living with HIV/AIDS in Australia’ AIDS Care 11(4): 405-14.
  • Ezzy, D. (1998) ‘Lived experience and interpretation in narrative theory: experiences of living with HIV/AIDS’ Qualitative Sociology 21(2): 169-79.
  • Ezzy, D. (2000) ‘Illness narratives: time, hope and HIV’ Social Science and Medicine 50(5): 605-17.
  • Fahy, K. and Smith, P. (1999) ‘From the sick role to subject positions: a new approach to the medical encounter’ Health 3(1): 71-93.
  • Fine, M. and Chalmers, J. (2000) ‘”User pays” and other approaches to the funding of longterm care for older people in Australia’ Ageing and Society 20(1): 5-32.
  • Fitzgerald, J. (1996) ‘Hidden populations and the gaze of power’ Journal of Drug Issues 26(1): 5-21.
  • Fulton, G., Madden, C. and Minichiello, V. (1996) ‘The social construction of anticipatory grief’ Social Science and Medicine 43:1349-1358.
  • Fougere, G. (2001) ‘Transforming health sectors: new logics of organizing in the New Zealand health system’ Social Science and Medicine 52(8): 1233-42.
  • Fullager, S. (2002) ‘Governing the healthy body: Discourses of leisure and lifestyle within Australian health policy’ Health 6(1): 69-84.
  • Galvin, C. and Pearson, M. (1994) ‘Cosmetic surgery: Newspaper reportage of the Medical Journal of Australia’ Australian Journal of Communication 21(2): 109-21.
  • Galvin, R. (2002) ‘Disturbing notions of chronic illness and individual responsibility: towards a genealogy of morals’ Health 6(2): 107-37.
  • Gardner, H. and Barraclough, S. (2002) Health Policy in Australia Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
  • Garrett, C. (1994) ‘The ‘eating disorders’ smorgasbord’ Australian Journal of Communication 21(2): 14-30.
  • Garrett, C. (1996) ‘Recovery from anorexia nervosa: a Durkheimian interpretation’ Social Science and Medicine 43(10): 1489-506.
  • Garrett, C. (2001) ‘Sources of hope in chronic illness’ Health Sociology Review 10 (2): 99-107.
  • Garrett, C. (2002) ‘Spirituality and healing in the sociology of chronic illness’ Health Sociology Review 11(1-2): 61-9.
  • Garrety, K. (1997) ‘Social worlds, actor-networks and controversy: the case of cholesterol, dietary fat and heart disease’ Social Studies of Science 27(5): 727-73.
  • Garrety, K. (1998) ‘Science, policy, and controversy in the cholesterol arena’ Symbolic Interaction 21(4): 401-24.
  • Gattuso, S. (2003) ‘Becoming a wise old woman: resilience and wellness in later life’ Health Sociology Review 12(2): 171-7.
  • Germov, J. and Williams, L. (1996) ‘The epidemic of dieting women: The need for a sociological approach to food and nutrition’ Appetite 27(2): 97-108.
  • Germov, J. (1994) ‘Medi-fraud: a systemic infection untreated’ Australian Journal of Social Issues 29(3): 301-04.
  • Germov, J. (1995) ‘Medi-fraud, managerialism and the decline of medical autonomy: deprofessionalisation and proletarianisation reconsidered’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 31(3): 51-66.
  • Germov, J. (2002) Second Opinion: An Introduction to Health Sociology. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
  • Germov, J. and Williams, L. (1996) ‘The sexual division of dieting: women’s voices’ The Sociological Review 44(4): 630-47.
  • Gibson, D., Turrell, G. and Jenkins, A. (1993) ‘Regulation and reform: promoting residents’ rights in Australian nursing homes’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 29(1): 73-91.
  • Goeman, D., Aroni, R., Stewart, K., Sawyer, S., Thien, F., Abramson, M. and Douglass, J. (2002) ‘Patients’ views of the burden of asthma: a qualitative study’ Medical Journal of Australia 177(6): 295-99.
  • Gosden, R. (1997) ‘The medicalisation of deviance’ Social Alternatives 16(2): 58-60.
  • Gossett, J. and Byrne, S. (2002) ‘“Click here”: a content analysis of internet rape sites’ Gender and Society 16(5): 689-709.
  • Grace, V. (1991) ‘The marketing of empowerment and the construction of the health consumer: a critique of health promotion’ International Journal of Health Services 21(2): 329-43.
  • Grace, V. (1998) ‘Mind/body dualism in medicine: the case of chronic pelvic pain without organic pathology’ International Journal of Health Services 28(1): 127-51.
  • Graetz, B. (1993) ‘Health consequences of employment and unemployment: longitudinal evidence for young men and women’ Social Science and Medicine 36(6): 715-24.
  • Gray, D. (1995) ‘Lay conceptions of autism: parents’ explanatory models’ Medical Anthropology 16(2): 99-118.
  • Gray, D. (1997) ‘High functioning autistic children and the construction of “normal family life”. Social Science and Medicine 44(8): 1097-106.
  • Gray, D. (2003) ‘Gender and coping: the parents of children with high functioning autism’ Social Science and Medicine 56(3): 631-42.
  • Gray, D. (1993) ‘Negotiating autism: relations between parents and treatment staff’ Social Science and Medicine 36(8): 1037-46.
  • Gray, D. (1993) ‘Perceptions of stigma: the parents of autistic children’ Sociology of Health and Illness 15(1): 102-20.
  • Gray, D. (1994) ‘Coping with autism: stresses and strategies’ Sociology of Health and Illness 16(3): 275-300.
  • Gray, D. (2001) ‘Accommodation, resistance and transcendence: three narratives of autism’ Social Science and Medicine 53(9): 1247-57.
  • Gray, D. (2002) ‘“Everybody just freezes. Everybody is just embarrassed”: Felt and enacted stigma among parents of children with high functioning autism’ Sociology of Health and Illness 24(6): 734-49.
  • Grbich, C. (1999) Health in Australia: Sociological Concepts and Issues. Sydney: Prentice Hall.
  • Guillemin, M. (2000) ‘Blood, bone, women and HRT: co-constructions in the menopause clinic’ Australian Feminist Studies 15(32): 191-203.
  • Han, G. (2000) ‘Traditional herbal medicine in the Korean community in Australia: a strategy to cope with health demands of immigrant life’ Health 4(4): 426-54.
  • Han, G. (2002) ‘The myth of medical pluralism: a critical realist perspective’ Sociological Research Online 6(4).
  • Harris, P. (1997) ‘Securing health and happiness: a note on possibilities and limits’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 33(2): 153-66.
  • Hart, B. (2003) ‘Lifetimes of limitation: breast health and human finitude’ Health Sociology Review 12(2): 111-19.
  • Hassan, R. (1996) ‘Euthanasia and the medical profession: an Australian study’ Australian Journal of Social Issues 31(3): 239-52.
  • Hepworth, J. (1999) The Social Construction of Anorexia Nervosa London: Sage.
  • Herrman, H., McGorry, P., Mills, J. and Singh, B. (1991) ‘Hidden severe psychiatric morbidity in sentenced prisoners: an Australian study’ The American Journal of Psychiatry 148(2): 236-39.
  • Hillier, L., Dempsey, D. and Harrison, L. (1999) ‘”I’d never share a needle”. [but I often have unsafe sex]: considering the paradox of young people’s sex and drugs talk’ Culture, Health and Sexuality 1(4): 347-61.
  • Hird, M. and Jackson, S. (2001) ‘Where ‘angels’ and ‘wusses’ fear to tread: sexual coercion in adolescent dating relationships’ Journal of Sociology 37(1): 27-43.
  • Hodgetts, D. and Chamberlain, K. (1999) ‘Medicalization and the depiction of lay people in television health documentary’ Health 3(3): 317-33.
  • Holmes, W., Stewart, P., Garrow, A., Anderson, I. and Thorpe, L. (2002) ‘Researching Aboriginal health: experience from a study of urban young people’s health and well-being’ Social Science and Medicine 54(8): 1267-79.
  • Hopkins, L. (2003) ‘Bad news: a narrative account of the subjective experience of mastectomy’ Health Sociology Review 12(2): 129-36.
  • Horsfall, J. (1991) ‘The silent participant: Bryan Turner on anorexia nervosa’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 27(2): 232-34.
  • Horsfall, J. (1998) ‘Mainstream approaches to mental health and illness: An emphasis on individuals and a de-emphasis of inequalities’ Health 2(2): 217-31.
  • Howarth, G. (2000) ‘Dismantling the boundaries between life and death’ Mortality 5(2): 127-38.
  • Humphreys, J. (2000) ‘Rural families and rural health’ Journal of Family Studies 6(2): 167-81.
  • Hyde, P. (2000) ‘Managing bodies - managing relationships: The popular media and the social construction of women’s bodies and social roles from the 1930s to the 1950s’ Journal of Sociology 36(2): 157-71.
  • Hyde, P. (2000) ‘Science friction: cervical cancer and the contesting of medical beliefs’ Sociology of Health and Illness 22(2): 217-34.
  • Hyndman, J., D’Arcy, C., Holman, J. and Pritchard, D. (2003) ‘The influence of attractiveness factors and distance to general practice surgeries by level of social disadvantage and global access in Perth, Western Australia’ Social Science and Medicine 56(2): 387-403.
  • Hyndman, J., Holman, C. & D’Arcy J. (2001) ‘Accessibility and spatial distribution of general practice services in an Australian city by levels of social disadvantage’ Social Science and Medicine 53(12): 1599-609.
  • Jirojwong, S. and Manderson, L. (2001) ‘Beliefs and behaviors about pap and breast selfexamination among Thai immigrant women in Brisbane, Australia’ Women and Health 33(3-4): 47-66.
  • Kelaher, M., Baigrie, N., Manderson, L., Moore, L., Shannon, C. and Williams, G. (1998) ‘Community perceptions of health, illness and care: identifying issues for Indigenous communities’ Women and Health 28(1): 41-61.
  • Kellehear, A. (1993) ‘Culture, biology and the near-death experience: a reappraisal’ The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 181(3): 148-56.
  • Kellehear, A. (1996) Experiences Near Death: Beyond Medicine and Religion New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Kellehear, A. (1996) Social Self, Global Culture: An Introduction to Sociological ideas Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
  • Kellehear, A. (1998) ‘Death, sociology and public health in Australia’ Mortality 3(2): 109-10.
  • Kellehear, A. (ed.) (2000) Death and Dying in Australia Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
  • Kellehear, A. (2000) Eternity and Me: The Everlasting things in Life and Death Melbourne: Hill of Content.
  • Kellehear, A. (ed.) (2001) Grief and Remembering: 25 Australians Tell It Like It Is Melbourne: Rivoli.
  • Kellehear, A. and Colquhoun, D. (1996) Health Research in Practice Melbourne: Chapman and Hall.
  • Kessler, R. (2002) ‘The categorical versus dimensional assessment controversy in the sociology of mental illness’ Journal of Health and Social Behavior 43(2): 171-88.
  • King, C. (2003) ‘Imagining the third age: symbolic exchange and old age’ Health Sociology Review 12(2): 156-62.
  • Kirk, D. and Tinning, R. (1994) ‘Embodied selfidentity, healthy lifestyles and school physical education’ Sociology of Health and Illness 16(5): 600-25.
  • Kirkman, A. (2001) ‘Productive readings: the portrayal of health “experts” in women’s magazines’ Qualitative Health Research 11(6): 751-65.
  • Kitto, S. (2001) ‘Negotiating medical dominance: the social construction of the care coordinator within the Tasmanian coordinated care trials’ Australian Journal of Primary Health - Interchange 7(2): 62-74.
  • Klein, R. and Dumble, L. (1994) ‘Disempowering midlife women: the science and politics of hormone replacement therapy (HRT)’ Women’s Studies International Forum 17(4): 327-43.
  • Koutroulis, G. (1998) ‘Withdrawal from injecting heroin use: thematizing the body’ Critical Public Health 8(3): 207-224
  • Koutroulis, G. (2001) ‘Soiled identity: memory-work narratives of menstruation’ Health 5(2): 187-205.
  • Kumar, A. (2003) ‘The use of complementary therapies in western Sydney’ Sociological Research Online 8(1).
  • Lawn, S., Pols, R. and Barber, J. (2002) ‘Smoking and quitting: a qualitative study with community-living psychiatric clients’ Social Science and Medicine 54(1): 93-104.
  • Lawrence, G. and Stehlik, D. (1996) ‘A direction towards sustainability? Australian rural communities and care for the aged’ Journal of the Community Development Society 27(1): 45-55.
  • Lear, D. (1996) ‘“You’re gonna be naked anyway”: College students negotiating safer sex’ Qualitative Health Research 6(1): 112-34.
  • Leask, J. and Chapman, S. (2002) ‘”The cold hard facts” immunisation and vaccine preventable diseases in Australia’s newsprint media 1993-1998’ Social Science and Medicine 54(3): 445-57.
  • Legge, D. (2001) ‘Technology and globalisation: the challenges for health sociology’ Health Sociology Review 10(2): 121-30.
  • Lewins, F. (1998) ‘The development of bioethics and the issue of euthanasia: regulating, deregulating or re-regulating?’ Journal of Sociology 34(2): 123-34.
  • Liamputtong Rice, P. (1995) ‘Pog laus, tsis coj khaub ncaws lawn: the meaning of menopause in Hmong women’ Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology 13(2): 79-92.
  • Liamputtong Rice, P. (1998) ‘Childhood health and illness: cultural beliefs and practices among the Hmong in Victoria’ Australian Journal of Primary Health 4(4): 44-59.
  • Liamputtong Rice, P. (1999) Asian Mothers, Western Birth Melbourne: Ausmed.
  • Liamputtong Rice, P. (1999) Living in a New Country: Understanding Migrant’s Health. Melbourne: Ausmed.
  • Liamputtong Rice, P. (2000) ‘Rooming-in and cultural practices: choice or constraints’ Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology 18(1): 21-32.
  • Little, M., Jordens, C., Paul, K., Montgomery, K. and Philipson, B. (1998) ‘Liminality: a major category of the experience of cancer illness’ Social Science and Medicine 47(10): 1485-94.
  • Llewellyn, M. (1998) ‘Constructing “epilepsy”: a case study of medical student texts from 1894-1994’ Journal of Sociology 34(1): 49-57.
  • Llewellyn, M. (1998) ‘Under blue skies: the social construction of intellectual disability in Australia’ Journal of Sociology 34(2): 207-09.
  • Lloyd, M. (2001) ‘The politics of disability and feminism: discord or synthesis?’ Sociology 35(3): 715-28.
  • Lloyd, M. and Roen, K. (2002) ‘”when you smell smoke…”: ‘risk factors’ and fire safety in action’ Risk and Society 4(2): 139-53.
  • Lloyd, M. (1991) ‘Troubles with team research: a personal account of a sociology graduate entering a health research unit’ New Zealand Sociology 6(2): 177-90.
  • Lloyd, M. (1996) ‘Condemned to be meaningful: non-response in studies of men and infertility’ Sociology of Health and Illness 18(4): 433-54.
  • Lloyd, M. (1997) ‘The language of reproduction: is it doctored?’ Qualitative Health Research 7(2): 184-201.
  • Lockie, S. and Lyons, K. (2001) ‘Renegotiating gender and the symbolic transformation of Australian rural environments’ International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food 9(1): 43-58.
  • Long, D. (2003) ‘Breast sharing: cross-feeding among Australian women’ Health Sociology Review 12(2): 103-10.
  • Luckman, S. (2000) ‘Mapping the regulation of dance parties’ Journal of Australian Studies 64: 217-223.
  • Lupton, D. (1992) Moral Threats and Sexual Punishment: Discourses on AIDS in the Australian Press Sydney: University of Sydney.
  • Lupton, D. (1993) ‘Aids risk and heterosexuality in the Australian press’ Discourse and Society 4(3): 307-28.
  • Lupton, D. (1994a) ‘The condom in the age of AIDS: newly respectable or still a dirty word? A discourse analysis’ Qualitative Health Research 4(3): 304-20.
  • Lupton, D. (1994b) ‘Consumerism, commodity culture and health promotion’ Health Promotion International 9(2): 111-18.
  • Lupton, D. (1994c) ‘Embodiment, representation, and social theory: new directions for health communication scholarship’ Australian Journal of Communication 21(2): 138-43.
  • Lupton, D. (1994d) ‘”The great debate about cholesterol”: medical controversy and the news media’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 30(3): 334-39.
  • Lupton, D. (1994e) Medicine as Culture: Illness, Disease and the Body in Western Societies London: Sage.
  • Lupton, D. (1994f) Moral Threats and Dangerous Desires: Aids in the News Media London: Taylor and Francis.
  • Lupton, D. (1994g) ‘Toward the development of critical health communication praxis’ Health Communication 6(1): 55-67.
  • Lupton, D. (1995a) ‘G.P.: a postmodern medical drama?’ Australian Journal of Communication 22(2): 108-20.
  • Lupton, D. (1995b) The Imperative of Health: Public Health and the Regulated Body. London: Sage.
  • Lupton, D. (1996a) ‘Constructing the menopausal body: the discourses on hormone replacement therapy’ Body and Society 2(1): 91-97.
  • Lupton, D. (1996b) Food, the Body and the Self London: Sage.
  • Lupton, D. (1997a) ‘Consumerism, reflexivity and the medical encounter’ Social Science and Medicine 45(3): 373-81.
  • Lupton, D. (1997b) ‘Doctors on the medical profession’ Sociology of Health and Illness 19(4): 480-97.
  • Lupton, D. (1997) ‘Psychoanalytic sociology and the medical encounter: Parsons and beyond’ Sociology of Health and Illness 19(5): 561-79.
  • Lupton, D. (1998) The Emotional Self: A Sociocultural Exploration London: Sage.
  • Lupton, D. (1998) ‘Psychoanalytic sociology and the medical encounter: a reply to Oilgrim’ Sociology of Health and Illness 20(4): 545-47.
  • Lupton, D. (1999a) ‘Archetypes of infection: people with HIV/AIDS in the Australian press in the mid 1990s’ Sociology of Health and Illness 21(1): 37-53.
  • Lupton, D. (1999b) ‘Developing the ‘whole me’: Citizenship, neo-liberalism and the contemporary health and physical education curriculum’ Critical Public Health 9(4): 287-300.
  • Lupton, D. (1999c) Risk New York: Routledge.
  • Lupton, D. (1999d) Risk and Sociocultural Theory: New Directions and Perspectives Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Lupton, D. (2000) ‘The heart of the meal: food preferences and habits among rural Australian couples’ Sociology of Health and Illness 22(1): 94-109.
  • Lupton, D. (2000) ‘”Where’s me dinner?”: food preparation arrangements in rural Australian families’ Journal of Sociology 36(2): 172-86.
  • Lupton, D. (2002) ‘Road rage: drivers’ understandings and experiences’ Journal of Sociology 38(3): 275-90.
  • Lupton, D. and Barclay, L. (1997) Constructing Fatherhood: Discourses and Experiences London: Sage.
  • Lupton, D. and Chapman, S. (1995) ‘”A Healthy lifestyle might be the death of you”: discourses on diet, cholesterol control and heart disease in the press and among the lay public’ Sociology of Health and Illness 17(4): 477-94.
  • Lupton, D., Donaldson, C. and Lloyd, P. (1991) ‘Caveat emptor or blissful ignorance? Patients and the consumerist ethos’ Social Science and Medicine 33(5): 559-68.
  • Lupton, D., McCarthy, S. and Chapman, S. (1995) ‘”Doing the right thing” the symbolic meanings and experiences of having an HIV antibody test’ Social Science and Medicine 41(2): 173-80.
  • Lupton, D., McCarthy, S. and Chapman, S. (1995) ‘“Panic bodies”: discourses on risk and HIV antibody testing’ Sociology of Health and Illness 17(1): 89-108.
  • Lupton, D. and McLean, J. (1998) ‘Representing doctors: discourses and images in the Australian press’ Social Science and Medicine 46(8): 947-58.
  • Lupton, D. and Seymour, W. (2000) ‘Technology, selfhood and physical disability’ Social Science and Medicine 50(12): 1851-62.
  • Lupton, D. and Tulloch, J. (1996) ‘“All red in the face”: students’ views on school-based HIV/AIDS and sexuality education’ The Sociological Review 44(2): 252-71.
  • Lupton, G. and Najman, J. (1995) Sociology of Health and Illness: Australian Readings South Melbourne: Macmillan Education.
  • Luxford, Y. (2003) ‘Troublesome breasts: older women living in the liminal state of being “at risk” of breast cancer’ Health Sociology Review 12(2): 146-54.
  • Magnusson, R. and Ballis, P. (1999) ‘The response of health care workers to AIDS patients’ requests for euthanasia’ Journal of Sociology 35(3): 312-30.
  • Makkai, T. and McAllister, I. (1993) ‘Public opinion and the legal status of marijuana in Australia’ Journal of Drug Issues 23(3): 409-27.
  • Manderson, L. (1999) ‘Gender, normality and the post-surgical body’ Anthropology and Medicine 6(3): 381-94.
  • Manderson, L. and Aaby, P. (1992) ‘An epidemic in the field? Rapid assessment procedures and health research’ Social Science and Medicine 35(7): 839-50.
  • Manderson, L., Kelaher, M., McLaughlin, C. and Sandberg, M. (1998) ‘Security and safe havens: health issues among women in mobile homes’ Women and Health 28(1): 83-96.
  • Marino, R., Minichiello, V., Wright, C. and Schofield, M. (2002) ‘Oral health beliefs and practices among Greek and Italian older Australians’ Australasian Journal on Ageing 21:193-98.
  • Marjoribanks, T. (2000) News Corporation, Technology and the Workplace: Global Strategies, Local Change Melbourne: Cambridge University Press.
  • Marjoribanks, T. and Lewis, J. M. (2003) ‘Reform and autonomy: perceptions of the Australian general practice community’ Social Science and Medicine 56(10): 2229-39.
  • Markovic, M. and Manderson, L. (2000) ‘Nowhere is as at home: adjustment strategies of recent immigrant women from the former Yugoslav republics in southeast Queensland’ Journal of Sociology 36(3): 315-28.
  • Martin, G. (1998) ‘Media influence to suicide: the search for solutions’ Archives of Suicide Research 4(1): 51-66.
  • Mayhew, C. and Quinlan, M. (2002) ‘Fordism in the fast food industry: pervasive management control and occupational health and safety risks for young temporary workers’ Sociology of Health and Illness 24(3): 261-84.
  • McAllister, I. and Makkai, T. (1991) ‘Whatever happened to marijuana? Patterns of marijuana use in Australia, 1985-1988’ The International Journal of the Addictions 26(5): 491-504.
  • McGregor, K. and Peay, E. (1996) ‘The choice of alternative therapy for health care: testing some propositions’ Social Science and Medicine 43(9): 1317-27.
  • McKenzie, H. (2002) ‘The turn to inwardness and cancer survivorship’ Health Sociology Review 11(1-2): 71-8.
  • McNamara, B., Waddell, C. and Colvin, M. (1994) ‘The institutionalization of the good death’ Social Science and Medicine 9(11): 1501-08.
  • McNamara, B., Waddell, C. and Colvin, M. (1995) ‘Threats to the good death: the cultural context of stress and coping among hospice nurses’ Sociology of Health and Illness 17(2): 222-44.
  • McWilliam, E. and O’Donnell, S. (1998) ‘Probing protocols: the genital examination as a pedagogical event’ Body and Society 4(3): 85-101.
  • Meekosha, H. and Jakubowicz, A. (1991) ‘Repetition strain injury: the rise and fall of an “Australian” disease’ Critical Social Policy 11(1(31): 18-37.
  • Mennell, S., Murcott, A. and van Otterloo, A. (1992) The Sociology of Food: Eating, Diet and Culture Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
  • Mensinger, J. (2001) ‘Conflicting gender role prescriptions and disordered eating in singlesex and coeducational school environments’ Gender and Education 13(4): 417-29.
  • Mikhailovich, K., Martin, S. and Lawton, S.(2001) ‘Lesbian and gay parents: their experiences of children’s health care in Australia’ Journal of Sexuality and Gender Studies 6(3): 181-91.
  • Millen, N. and Kellehear, A. (1992) ‘Australia’s most pressing social problem: nursing vs nonnursing students’ views’ Nurse Education Today. 12(1): 24-8.
  • Millen, N., Peterson, C. and Woodward, R. (1998) ‘A sociological analysis of chronic fatigue syndrome and the impact on family support structures’ The International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 18(7-8): 127-47.
  • Millen, N. and Walker, C. (2001) ‘Overcoming the stigma of chronic illness: strategies for normalisation of a “spoiled identity” Health Sociology Review 10(2): 89-97.
  • Minichiello, V., Marino, R., Kahn, A. and Browne, J. (2003) ‘Alcohol and drug use in Australian male sex workers: its relationship to the safety outcomes of the sex encounter’ AIDS Care 15: 549-62.
  • Minichiello, V., Marino, R. and Browne, J. (2001) ‘Knowledge, risk perceptions and condom usage in male sex workers from three Australian cities’ AIDS Care 13:387-402.
  • Minichiello, V., Marino, R., Browne, J., Jamieson, M., Peterson, K., Reuter, B. and Robinson, K. (1999) ‘A profile of the clients of male sex workers in Australian cities’ Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health 23:65-72.
  • Minichiello, V., Browne, J. and Kendig, H. (2000) ‘Perceptions and consequences of ageism: views from older persons’ Ageing and Society 20:253-278.
  • Minichiello, V., Loxton, D. and Plummer, D. (2000) ‘Knowledge and beliefs of older Australians about sexuality and health’ Australasian Journal on Ageing 19:188-192.
  • Minichiello, V., Marino, R., Browne, J., Jamieson, M., Peterson, K., Reuter, B. and Robinson, K. (2000) ‘Commercial sex between men: a prospective diary-based study’ Journal of Sex Research 37:151-160.
  • Mooney, G., Jan, S. and Wiseman, V. (2002) ‘Staking a claim for claims: a case study of resource allocation in Australian Aboriginal health care’ Social Science and Medicine 54(11): 1657-67.
  • Morrisey, M. (2003) ‘Poverty and Indigenous health’ Health Sociology Review 12(1): 17-30.
  • Morgan, J. (2002) ‘US hate crime legislation: a legal model to avoid in Australia’ Journal of Sociology 38(1): 25-48.
  • Morton, T. and Duck, J. (2001) ‘Communication and health beliefs: mass and interpersonal influences on perceptions of risk to self and others’ Communication Research 28(5): 602-26.
  • Mulholland, J. (1994) ‘Multiple directives in the doctor-patient consultation’ Australian Journal of Communication 21(2): 74-85.
  • Mulvany, J. (2000) ‘Disability, impairment or illness? The relevance of the social model of disability to the study of mental disorder’ Sociology of Health and Illness 22(5): 582-601.
  • Murray, A. and Robinson, T. (1996) ‘Minding your peers and queers: female sex workers in the AIDS discourse in Australia and South-east Asia’ Gender, Place and Culture 3(1): 43-59.
  • Najman, J. M. and Bampton, M. (1991) ‘An ASCO based occupational status hierarchy for Australia: a research note’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 27(2): 218-31.
  • Najman, J., Bor, W., Morrison, J., Andersen, M. and Williams, G. (1992) ‘Child developmental delay and socio-economic disadvantage in Australia: a longitudinal study’ Social Science and Medicine 34(8): 829-35.
  • Najman, J., Morrison, J., Williams, G., Andersen, M. and Keeping, J. D. (1991) ‘The mental health of women 6 months after they give birth to an unwanted baby: a longitudinal study’ Social Science and Medicine 32(3): 241-47.
  • Natalier, K. (2001) ‘Motorcyclists’ interpretations of risk and hazard’ Journal of Sociology 37(1): 65-80.
  • Navon, L. (1996) ‘Cultural notions versus social actions: the case of the socio-cultural history of leprosy in Thailand’ Social Analysis 40: 95-119.
  • Newton, L. (2001) ‘Self and illness: changing relationships in response to life in the community following prolonged institutionalisation’ The Australian Journal of Anthropology 12(2): 166-81.
  • Norris, P. (1997) ‘Gender and occupational change: women and retail pharmacy in New Zealand’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 33(1): 21-38.
  • Norris, P. (2001) ‘How “we” are different from “them”: occupational boundary maintenance in the treatment of musculo-skeletal problems’ Sociology of Health and Illness 23(1): 24-43.
  • Opie, A. (1993) ‘Representations of caregiving: the writing-up process’ New Zealand Sociology 8(1): 1-20.
  • Opie, A. (1994) ‘The instability of the caring body: gender and caregivers of confused older people’ Qualitative Health Research 4(1): 31-50.
  • Opie, A. (1997) ‘Teams as author: narrative and knowledge creation in case discussions in multi-disciplinary health teams’ Sociological Research Online 2(3).
  • Opie, A. (1997) ‘Thinking teams thinking clients: issues of discourse and representation in the work of health care teams’ Sociology of Health and Illness 19(3): 259-80.
  • Opie, A. (1998) ‘“Nobody’s asked me for my view”: users’ empowerment by multidisciplinary health teams’ Qualitative Health Research 8(2): 188-206.
  • Papadakis, E. (1993) ‘Public opinion, sexual difference and the welfare state’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 29(3): 343-66.
  • Park, J. (1992) ‘Interested parties: a discussion of public statements in the alcohol arena in New Zealand’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 28(3): 351-68.
  • Pernice, R. and Long, N. (1996) ‘Long-term unemployment, employment attitudes and mental health’ Australian Journal of Social Issues 31(3): 311-26.
  • Petersen, A. (2001) ‘Biofantasies: genetics and medicine in the print news media’ Social Science and Medicine 52(8): 1255-68.
  • Petersen, A. and Bunton, R. (1997) Foucault, Health and Medicine London: Routledge.
  • Petersen, A. (1996) ‘Risk and the regulated self: the discourse of health promotion as politics of uncertainty’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 32(1): 44-57.
  • Petersen, A. and Lupton, D. (1996) The New Public Health: Health and Self in the Age of Risk St Leonards, NSW: Allen and Unwin.
  • Petersen, A. and Waddell, C. (1998) Health Matters: A Sociology of Illness, Prevention and Care St Leonards, NSW: Allen and Unwin.
  • Peterson, C. (1994) ‘Work factors and stress: a critical review’ International Journal of Health Services 24(3): 495-519.
  • Peterson, C. (1999) Stress at Work: A Sociological Perspective Amityville, N.Y.: Baywood.
  • Plummer, D. (2001) ‘The quest for modern manhood: masculine stereotypes, peer culture and the social significance of homophobia’ Journal of Adolescence 24(1): 15-23.
  • Plumridge, E. , Chetwynd, J., Reed, A. and Gifford, S. (1996) ‘Patrons of the sex industry: perceptions of risk’ AIDS Care 8(4): 405-16.
  • Plumridge, E. and Chetwynd, J. (1999) ‘Identity and the social construction of risk: injecting drug use’ Sociology of Health and Illness 21(3): 329-43.
  • Plumridge, E., Chetwynd, J. and Reed, A. (1997) ‘Control and condoms in commercial sex: client perspectives’ Sociology of Health and Illness 19(2): 228-43.
  • Plumridge, E., Chetwynd, J., Reed, A. and Gifford, S. (1997) ‘Discourses of emotionality in commercial sex: the missing client voice’ Feminism and Psychology 7(2): 165-81.
  • Plumridge, L. (2001) ‘Rhetoric, reality and risk outcomes in sex work’ Health, Risk and Society 3(2): 199-215.
  • Pooley, J., Pike, L., Drew, N. and Breen, L. (2002) ‘Inferring Australian children’s sense of community: a critical exploration’ Community, Work and Family 5(1): 5-22.
  • Pope, J. (2002) ‘Social capital in health research: how can it be used to examine health inequalities?’ Health Sociology Review 11(1- 2): 17-26.
  • Potts, A. (2000) ‘Coming, coming, gone: a feminist deconstruction of heterosexual orgasm’ Sexualities 3(1): 55-76.
  • Potts, A. (2000) ‘“The essence of the hard on”: hegemonic masculinity and the cultural construction of “erectile dysfunction” Men and Masculinities 3(1): 85-103.
  • Potts, A. (2001) ‘The man with two brains: hegemonic masculine subjectivity and the discursive construction of the unreasonable penis-self’ Journal of Gender Studies 10(2): 145-56.
  • Potts, A. (2002) ‘Homebodies: images of ‘inner space’ and domesticity in women’s talk on sex’ Journal of Mundane Behavior 3(1).
  • Pringle, R. (1996) ‘Nursing a grievance: women doctors and nurses’ Journal of Gender Studies 5(2): 157-68.
  • Pyett, P. and Warr, D. (1999) ‘Women at risk in sex work: strategies for survival’ Journal of Sociology 35(2): 183-97.
  • Race, K. (2001) ‘The undetectable crisis: changing technologies of risk’ Sexualities 4(2): 167-89.
  • Rayner, L. and Easthope, G. (2001) ‘Postmodern consumption and alternative medications’ Journal of Sociology 37(2): 157-76.
  • Rees, R. and Hannaford, M. (1996) ‘Effects on the primary caregiver when a family member experiences acquired brain injury’ Australian Journal of Social Issues 31(4): 392-409.
  • Reid, G., Beyer, L., Aitken, C. and Crofts, N. (2001) ‘Markers of ethnicity and their effect on measuring illicit drug use by ethnic groups’ Drug and Alcohol Review 20(3): 309-17.
  • Reiger, K. (2000) ‘The politics of midwifery in Australia: tensions, debates and opportunities’ Health Sociology Review 1(10) 53.
  • Reilly, D., Didcott, P., Swift, W. and Hall, W. (1998) ‘Long-term cannabis use: characteristics of users in an Australian rural area’ Addiction 93(6): 837-46.
  • Rich, M. and Chalfen, R. (1999) ‘Showing and telling asthma: children teaching physicians with visual narrative’ Visual Sociology 14: 51-71.
  • Richards, L. and Richards, T. (1991) ‘Computing in qualitative analysis: a healthy development?’ Qualitative Health Research 1(2): 234-62.
  • Richmond, R., Wodak, A., Kehoe, L. and Heather, N. (1998) ‘How healthy are the police? A survey of life-style factors’ Addiction 93(11): 1729-37.
  • Ridge, D., Minichiello, V. and Plummer, D. (1997) ‘Queer connections: community, “the scene”, and an epidemic’ Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 26(2): 146-81.
  • Rigby, K. (2000) ‘Effects of peer victimization in schools and perceived social support on adolescent well-being’ Journal of Adolescence 23(1): 57-68.
  • Rigby, K., Virgo, I., Russell, G. and Cormack, S. (1992) ‘Occupational role and perceptions of substance misuse in Australia’ The International Journal of the Addictions 27(5): 515-31.
  • Ripper, M. (2001) ‘Abortion: the shift in stigmatisation from those seeking abortion to those providing it’ Health Sociology Review 10(2): 65-77.
  • Ritchie, L. (2001) ‘Empowerment and Australian community health nurses’ work with Aboriginal clients: the sociopolitical context’ Qualitative Health Research 11(2): 190-205.
  • Roberts, C., Kippax, S., Waldby, C. and Crawford, J. (1995) ‘Faking it: the story of “Ohh!”’ Women’s Studies International Forum 18(5-6): 523-32.
  • Roberts, G. L., Williams, G. M., Lawrence, J. M. and Raphael, B. (1998) ‘How does domestic violence affect women’s mental health?’ Women and Health 28(1): 117-29.
  • Roseneil, S. and Seymour, J. (1999) Practising Identities: Power and Resistance Basingstoke: Macmillan.
  • Roth, N. and Nelson, M. (1997) ‘HIV diagnosis rituals and identity narratives’ AIDS Care 9(2): 161-79.
  • Rowe, D. and McGuirk, P. (1999) ‘Drunk for three weeks: sporting success and city image’ International Review for the Sociology of Sport 34(2): 125-41.
  • Rowsell, B., Norris, P., Ryan, K. and Weenink, M. (2000) ‘Assessing and managing risk and uncertainty: women living with breast implants’ Health, Risk and Society 2(2): 205-18.
  • Ryan, L. (1995) ‘“Going public” and “watching sick people”: the clinic setting as a factor in the experiences of gay men participating in AIDS clinical trials’ AIDS Care 7(2): 147-58.
  • Saggers, S. and Gray, D. (1997) ‘Supplying and promoting ‘grog’: the political economy of alcohol in Aboriginal Australia’ Australian Journal of Social Issues 32(3): 215-37.
  • Saggers, S. and Gray, D. (2001) ‘Theorising Indigenous health: a political economy of health and substance misuse’ Health Sociology Review 10(2): 21-32.
  • Saha, L. and Pilkinton, N. (1993) ‘Aids knowledge and attitudes among Canberra secondary school students’ Journal of Social Issues 28(2): 158-77.
  • Sainsbury, P., Harris, E. and Nutbeam, D. (1999) Perspectives on Health Inequity Sydney: Australian Centre for Health Promotion.
  • Savage, E. (2003) ‘Equity, payment incentives and cost control in Medicare: an assessment of the government’s proposals’ Health Sociology Review 12(1): 5-17.
  • Sawyer, S.M. and Aroni, R.A. (2003) ‘Sticky issue of adherence’ Journal of Paediatric and Child Health 39: 2-5.
  • Schmied, V. and Lupton, D. (2001) ‘Blurring the boundaries: breastfeeding and maternal subjectivity’ Sociology of Health and Illness 23(2): 234-50.
  • Scott, A., Shiell, A. and King, M. (1996) ‘Is general practitioner decision making associated with patient socio-economic status?’ Social Science and Medicine 42(1): 35-46.
  • Schofield, M., Minichiello, V., Mishra, G., Plummer, D. and Savage, J. (2000) ‘Sexually transmitted infections and use of sexual health services among young Australian women: Women’s Health Australian Study’ International Journal of STD and AIDS 11:313-323.
  • Schofield, T. (2002) ‘What does “gender and health” mean?’ Health Sociology Review 11(1-2): 29-38.
  • Siahpush, M. (1998) ‘Postmodern values, dissatisfaction with conventional medicine and popularity of alternative therapies’ Journal of Sociology 34(1): 58-70.
  • Siahpush, M. (1998) ‘Sociological explanations of why doctors shun qualitative social research’ Social Alternatives 17(1): 41-42.
  • Siahpush, M. (2000) ‘A critical review of the sociology of alternative medicine: research on users, practitioners and the orthodoxy’ Health 4(2): 159-78.
  • Sinclair-Jones, I. (2000) ‘E-medicine and e-work: the new international division of medical labour? Health Sociology Review 10(1): 19 - 23
  • Southgate, E. and Hopwood, M. (1999) ‘Mardi gras says “be drug free”: accounting for resistance, pleasure and the demand for illicit drugs’ Health 3(3): 303-16.
  • Stanton, P. (2001) ‘Competitive health policies and community health’ Social Science and Medicine 52(5): 671-79.
  • Stevens, C. (2001) ‘Perspectives on the meanings of symptoms among Cambodian refugees’ Journal of Sociology 37(1): 81-98.
  • Stratford, E. (1994) ‘Disciplining the feminine, the home, and nature in three Australian public health histories’ Australian Journal of Communication 21(3): 56-71.
  • Sullivan, L. (1993) ‘In the path of Daedalus: middle-class Australians’ attitudes to embryo research’ The British Journal of Sociology 44(2): 271-302.
  • Sutton, A. (2000) ‘Cannabis law and the young adult user: reflections on South Australia’s cannabis expiation notice system’ International Journal of the Sociology of Law 28(2): 147-62.
  • Tait, G. (1993) ‘’Anorexia nervosa’: asceticism, differentiation, government’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 29(2): 194-208.
  • Taylor, A. (2002) ‘On changing the social relations of Australian childbirth: a cautionary note’ Health Sociology Review 11(1-2): 87-94.
  • Thompson, S. and Gifford, S. (2000) ‘Trying to keep a balance: the meaning of health and diabetes in an urban Aboriginal community’ Social Science and Medicine 51(10): 1457-72.
  • Tsey, K. and Hunter, E. (2002) ‘Indigenous health and the contribution of sociology: a review’ Health Sociology Review 11(1-2): 79-86.
  • Tulloch, J. and Chapman, S. (1992) ‘Experts in crisis: the framing of radio debate about the risk of AIDS to heterosexuals’ Discourse and Society 3(4): 437-67.
  • Tulloch, J. and Lupton, D. (1994) ‘Health communication after ICA/ANZCA ’94: some issues of theory and method’ Australian Journal of Communication 21(2): 122-37.
  • Tulloch, J. and Lupton, D. (1997) Television, AIDS and risk: A Cultural Studies Approach to Health Communication St Leonards, NSW: Allen and Unwin.
  • Turner, B.S. (1992) Regulating Bodies: Essays in Medical Sociology London: Routledge.
  • Turner, B.S. (1995) Medical Power and Social Knowledge (2nd Edition) Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
  • Turner, B.S. (1996) The Body and Society: Explorations in Social Theory (2nd Edition) London: Sage.
  • Turner, B.S. (1997) ‘What is the sociology of the body? Body and Society 3(1) 103-107
  • Vickers, M. (2000) ‘The “invisibly” chronically ill as unexamined organizational fringe-dwellers: voices of ambiguity, confusion, and uncertainty’ Sociology of Work 9: 3-21.
  • Waddell, C. (1996) ‘Female sex work, non-work sex and HIV in Perth’ Australian Journal of Social Issues 31(4): 410-24.
  • Waddell, C. (1992) ‘Social correlates of unsafe sexual intercourse’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 28(2): 192-207.
  • Waddell, C. and Petersen, A. (1994) Just Health: Inequality in Illness, Care and Prevention Melbourne: Churchill Livingstone.
  • Waldby, C. (1997) ‘The body and the digital archive: The visible human project and the computerization of medicine’ Health 1(2): 227.
  • Waldby, C., Kippax, S. and Crawford, J. (1995) ‘Epidemiological knowledge and discriminatory practice: Aids and the social relations of biomedicine’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 31(1): 1-14.
  • Waldby, C., Kippax, S. and Crawford, J. (1993) ‘Heterosexual men and “safe sex” practice’ Sociology of Health and Illness 15(2): 246-56.
  • Walker, B. R. and Wright, S. M. (1992) ‘Whole people: putting personal and social issues into school health curricula: a case study from Australia’ Health Promotion International 7(2): 99-107.
  • Walker, C. (1998) ‘Historical sociology and the hospital system in Melbourne: a sociological method to challenge some of the assumptions about the emergence of the modern hospital system’ Australian Journal of Social Research 5(1): 37-54.
  • Warin, M. (2000) ‘The glass cage: an ethnography of exposure in schizophrenia’ Health 4(1): 115-33.
  • Warner-Smith, P. and Mishra, G. (2002) ‘“Happy hours”: women’s wellbeing and their satisfaction with hours of paid work’ Health Sociology Review 11(1-2): 39-48.
  • Warr, D. (2001) ‘The importance of love and understanding: speculation on romance in safe sex health promotion’ Women’s Studies International Forum 24(2): 241-52.
  • Warr, D. and Pyett, P. (1999) ‘Difficult relations: sex work, love and intimacy’ Sociology of Health and Illness 21(3): 290-309.
  • Watts, I. and Pinskier, N. (2001) ‘What’s happening in general practice: a contrasting view’ Health Sociology Review 10(2): 109-20.
  • Wearing, B., Wearing, S. and Kelly, K. (1994) ‘Adolescent women, identity and smoking: leisure experience as resistance’ Sociology of Health and Illness 16(5): 626-43.
  • Wearing, M. (1993) ‘Professional discourse and sensational journalism: media constructions of violent insanity’ Australian Journal of Communication 20(1): 84-98.
  • Wearing, M. (1994) ‘The health professions, psychiatric discourse, and the classification of mental illness’ Australian Journal of Communication 21(2): 53-73.
  • Weeramanthri, T. (1997) ‘“Painting a Leonardo with finger paint”: medical practitioners communicating about death with Aboriginal people’ Social Science and Medicine 45(7): 1005-15.
  • Westbrook, M., Legge, V. and Pennay, M. (1993) ‘Attitudes towards disabilities in a multicultural society’ Social Science and Medicine 36(5): 615-23.
  • White, K. and Robb, J. (1993) ‘Control and change: studies in the sociology of medicine in New Zealand’ International Review of Sociology 3: 117-218.
  • White, K. (1999) ‘Negotiating science and liberalism: medicine in nineteenth century South Australia’ Medical History 43: 173-91.
  • White, K. (2001) ‘From professional to subcontractor: the swift decline of general practice’ Health Sociology Review 10(2):117-20.
  • White, K. (2001) ‘What’s happening in general practice? Monopolisation and state administrative control: a profession bailing out?’ Health Sociology Review 10: 5-18.
  • White, K. and Willis, E. (2001) ‘Positivism resurgent: the epistemological foundations of evidence-based medicine’ Health Sociology Review 11, 1-8.
  • White, K. (1991) The Sociology of Health and Illness London: Sage.
  • White, K. (1991) ‘Trend report: the sociology of health and illness’ Current Sociology 39(2): 1-134.
  • White, K. (2002) An Introduction to the Sociology of Health and Illness London: Sage.
  • White, K. and Collyer, F. (1998) ‘Health care markets in Australia: ownership of the private hospital sector’ Journal of Health Services 28(3): 487-510.
  • White, K. (2000) ‘The state, the market, and general practice: the Australian case’ Journal of Health Services 30(2): 285-308.
  • White, K. and Willis, E. (1992) ‘The languages of AIDS’ New Zealand Sociology 7(2): 127-49.
  • White, R. (2002) ‘Social and political aspects of men’s health’ Health 6(3): 267-85.
  • Whittaker, A. and Connor, L. (1998) ‘Engendering stress in Australia: the embodiment of social relationships’ Women and Health 28(1): 97-115.
  • Whittaker, A. (1992) ‘Living with HIV: Resistance by positive people’ Medical Anthropology Quarterly 6(4): 385-90.
  • Wicks, D. (1995) ‘Nurses and doctors and discourses of healing’ The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 31(2): 122-39.
  • Wiggers, J. and Sanson-Fisher, R. (1997) ‘Duration of general practice consultations: association with patient occupational and educational status’ Social Science and Medicine 44(7): 925-34.
  • Williams, S. (2002) ‘Trying on gender, gender regimes, and the process of becoming women’ Gender and Society 16(1): 29-52.
  • Willis, E. and Parish, K. (1997) ‘Managing the doctor-nurse game: a nursing and social science analysis’ Contemporary Nurse. 6(3-4): 136-44.
  • Willis, E. (1990) ‘Occupational stress and RANS’ Australian Journal of Advanced Nursing. 8(2): 18-26.
  • Willis, E. (2000) ‘Computerised hospital work: Fordism and Faylorism revisited’ Health Sociology Review 10(1): 31-36.
  • Willis, E. (1982) ‘Research and teaching in the sociology of health and illness in Australia and New Zealand’ Community Health Studies, 6( 2): 144-153.
  • Willis, E. (1991a) ‘The sociology of health and illness in Australia: the 1980’s and beyond’ Annual Review of Health Social Science. 1: 46-53
  • Willis, E. (1991b) ‘Chiropractic in Australia’ Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics. 14(1): 59-69.
  • Willis, E. (1994) Illness and Social Relations: Issues in the Sociology of Health Care. St Leonards, N.S.W.: Allen and Unwin.
  • Willis, E. (1997) ‘The prostatic imperative and the social relations of medical technology’ International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care 13(4): 602-12.
  • Willis, E. (1998) ‘Public health, private genes: the social context of genetic biotechnologies’ Critical Public Health 8(2): 131-39.
  • Willis, E. (2002) ‘Public health and the ‘new’ genetics: balancing individual and collective outcomes’ Critical Public Health 12(2): 139-51.
  • Willis, E., Miller, R. and Wyn, J. (2001) ‘Gendered embodiment and survival for young people with cystic fibrosis’ Social Science and Medicine 53(9): 1163-74.
  • Willis, J. (1999) ‘Dying in country: implications of culture in the delivery of palliative care in Indigenous Australian communities’ Anthropology and Medicine 6(3): 423-35.
  • Wilton, T. (1997) Engendering AIDS: Deconstructing Sex, Text and Epidemic London: Sage.
  • Winefield, H. (1997) ‘Sources and prevention of occupational stress in medical practitioners’ Australian Journal of Social Research 3(1): 95-108.
  • Winefield, H., Murrell, T. and Clifford, J. (1995) ‘Process and outcomes in general practice consultations: problems in defining high quality care’ Social Science and Medicine 41(7): 969-75.
  • Woodward, L., Fergusson, D.M. and Horwood, L.J. (2001) ‘Risk factors and life processes associated with teenage pregnancy: results of a prospective study from birth to 20 years’ Journal of Marriage and the Family 63(4): 1170-84.
  • Woolcock, H., Thearle, J. and Saunders, K. (1997) ‘“My beloved chloroform” attitudes to childbearing in colonial queensland: a case study’ Social History of Medicine 10(3): 437-57.
  • Yates, P., Beadle, G., Clavarino, A., Najman, J., Thomson, D., Williams, G., Kenny, L., Roberts, S., Mason, B. and Schlect, D. (1993) ‘Patients with terminal cancer who use alternative therapies: their beliefs and practices’ Sociology of Health and Illness 15(2): 199-216.
  • Young, A., Dobson., Annette J. and Byles, J. (2001) ‘Determinants of general practioner use among women in Australia’ Social Science and Medicine 53(12): 1641-51.
  • Yusuf, F. and Siedlecky, S. (1996) ‘Family formation patterns among migrant women in Sydney’ Journal of Biosocial Science 28(1): 89-99.
  • Zadoroznyj, M. (1999) ‘Social class, social selves and social control in childbirth’ Sociology of Health and Illness 21(3): 267.
  • Zadoroznyj, M. (2001) ‘Birth and the “reflexive consumer”: trust, risk and medical dominance in obstetric encounters’ Journal of Sociology 37(2): 117-39.
  • Zajdow, G. (1995) ‘Caring and nurturing in the lives of women married to alcoholics’ Women’s Studies International Forum 18(5-6): 533-46.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.