2. Introduction
• The word Sociology was coined by Auguste Comte in 1839
and is hence considered to be the “Father of science of
sociology.”
3. Medical Sociology
Includes studies of
• Medical profession
• Relationship of medicine to public
• Role of social factor in etiology, incidence, prevalence
and interpretation of diseases.
4. • Sociology : Study of individual as well as group in society.
• Society : a group of individuals who have organized themselves
and follow a given way of life.
5. GROUP:
• Is a collection of human beings,
• Is an artificial creation.
• Membership is voluntary,
• Is always organised,
• Has always a specific purpose,
• Is marked by co-operation among members,
• May be temporary
8. SOCIETY:
• Is a system of social relationships.
• Is a natural group whose membership is compulsory.
• Is organised
• Has only a general purpose,
• Marked by co-operation & conflicts
• Is permanent.
• Has essential elements
• Shows co-operation.
• Therefore a society is an organised group of people with complex patterns
of norms of interactions that arise among them.
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10. Community
• A community is a social group determined by
geographical boundaries and/ or common values and
interests.
• Its members know and interacts with each other.
• It functions within a particular social structure and
exhibits and creates certain norms, values and social
institutions.
11. Community
• Structural communities are organised by geographical or political
boundaries.
• It could be as small as an ‘indoor patient’s community in a
hospital or increasingly larger, according to a mohalla, village,
slum, city, district, state or even a nation.
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16. Role
• In a society, individuals are allocated roles.
• Sociologist have classified roles into ascribed and achieved,
according to whether a particular role is “given” by a virtue
of sex, age, and birth status or “acquired” by virtue of
education or otherwise.
17. Social Control Mechanisms
• In every society there are rules, formal and informal, for
the maintenance of relationships of authority and
subordinations.
• In the field of health, there are various Acts, some central
and others state or local which help to maintain standards
of health.
18. Social Control Mechanisms
• The informal social pressure may be exerted by powerful groups,
individuals or friends.
• These mechanisms work largely through reward and
punishment.
• e.g., In India, the government is offering a small financial reward
to those who undergo sterilization operation.
• It is a sort of informal social pressure to further the programme
of family planning in India.
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21. Customs
• The mere existence of a society, the mere plurality of
individuals gives rise to customs.
• quite numerous and quite as powerful.
23. Customs
• The folkways are right ways of doing things in what is
regarded as the less vital areas of human conduct.
• The more stringent customs are called “mores”. The public
takes active parts in their enforcement.
24. people crossing paths in the street nod and say "hello" or
"how are you?
Drivers meeting one another on remote country roads give
each other a quick wave.
25. It is not considered acceptable or mainstream to abuse drugs,
particularly those such as heroine and cocaine.
Talking to oneself in public ?
Not Rising for the national anthem?
Robbing a bank?
26. Culture
• Culture : “learned behaviour which has been socially
acquired”.
• Product of human societies, and man is largely a product of his
cultural environment.
• Transmitted from one generation to another through learning
processes.
• Culture stands for the customs, beliefs, laws, religion and
moral precepts, arts and other capabilities and skills acquired
by man as a member of society.
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29. Culture
• Every culture has its own customs, some of which have a
profound influence on the incidence of disease.
• In developed countries, for example, cancer of the lung from
smoking and cirrhosis of liver from drinking alcohol are the
result of the abuse of widely proclaimed social habits.
• In India, chewing pan is associated with oral cancer.
30. Acculturation
• Acculturation means “culture contact”.
• When there is contact between two people with different types
of culture, there is diffusion of culture both ways.
• There are various ways by which culture contact takes place.
Trade and commerce
Industrialization
Propagation of religion,
Education and
Conquest
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33. Social problems
• In a community there are both individual and social
problems.
• Individual problems become social problems when they
affect a large number of people amounting to a threat to
the welfare or safety of the whole group.
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35. Social pathology
• Describes the relation between disease and social conditions,
commonly linked to poverty, crime, delinquency and vagrancy.
• The social pathology has an important role in accident,
diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, cancer etc.
• Social surveys will disclose social pathology.