Habitus, Stress, and the Body: The Everyday Production of Health and Cardiovascular Risk

The incidence of coronary heart disease (CHD) and the distribution of contributory risk factors are closely linked with social patterns of advantage and disadvantage. The authors conducted eight focus groups in urban, northern, and rural sites in Ontario, Canada. Participants were all at high absolu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Qualitative health research 2007-10, Vol.17 (8), p.1088-1102
Hauptverfasser: Angus, Jan, Rukholm, Ellen, Onge, Renée St, Michel, Isabelle, Nolan, Robert P., Lapum, Jennifer, Evans, Sarah
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container_end_page 1102
container_issue 8
container_start_page 1088
container_title Qualitative health research
container_volume 17
creator Angus, Jan
Rukholm, Ellen
Onge, Renée St
Michel, Isabelle
Nolan, Robert P.
Lapum, Jennifer
Evans, Sarah
description The incidence of coronary heart disease (CHD) and the distribution of contributory risk factors are closely linked with social patterns of advantage and disadvantage. The authors conducted eight focus groups in urban, northern, and rural sites in Ontario, Canada. Participants were all at high absolute risk for or had been diagnosed with CHD. Analysis centered on habitus, which forms the pivotal link between the person and “place.” The authors focused on participants' dialogue about stress because it dealt with the impingements of the social world and resultant constraints on health-related activities in everyday places. Participants described four types of places or social positions in their “stress talk”: work-places, transitional spaces, gendered situations, and exclusions. Places can support or constrain health related activities in many ways. Habits and practices linked with stress by participants were enduringly associated with these contexts, suggesting that place, body, and health are inseparable and coconstituted.
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The authors conducted eight focus groups in urban, northern, and rural sites in Ontario, Canada. Participants were all at high absolute risk for or had been diagnosed with CHD. Analysis centered on habitus, which forms the pivotal link between the person and “place.” The authors focused on participants' dialogue about stress because it dealt with the impingements of the social world and resultant constraints on health-related activities in everyday places. Participants described four types of places or social positions in their “stress talk”: work-places, transitional spaces, gendered situations, and exclusions. Places can support or constrain health related activities in many ways. 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source MEDLINE; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Canada
Cardiovascular disease
Coronary Disease - economics
Coronary Disease - epidemiology
Coronary Disease - psychology
Coronary diseases
Environment
Female
Focus Groups
Geography
Habits
Habitus
Health Behavior
Health inequalities
Health technology assessment
Humans
Male
Medical research
Ontario - epidemiology
Risk Assessment
Risk Factors
Rural Population
Social Class
Social Environment
Stress
Stress, Psychological - complications
Stress, Psychological - epidemiology
Urban Population
Vulnerable Populations - psychology
Vulnerable Populations - statistics & numerical data
title Habitus, Stress, and the Body: The Everyday Production of Health and Cardiovascular Risk
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