`A comprehensive overview of the way bodily experiences of health and disease in everyday life are given meaning in a society dominated by the biomedical model of well-being... [Radley] draws on studies from a variety of disciplines including medical sociology health psychology and medical anthropology. By addressing the issues in this way he clarifies how the kind of research methodology adopted reveals different kinds of truths... the book provides a valuable and critical introduction to the social and psychological consideration of health and illness. Furthermore given the increasing interest in user perspectives in health care provision it will be useful reading for all those interested in health promotion and how ideas of health and illness are constructed' - Social Sciences in Health
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