The major sociological perspectives on health and medicine all recognize these
points but offer different ways of understanding health and medicine that fall into
the functional, conflict, and symbolic interactionist approaches. Together they
provide us with a more comprehensive understanding of health, medicine, and
society than any one approach can do by itself (Cockerham, 2009).Cockerham, W. C.
(2009). Medical sociology (11th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
The Functionalist Approach
As conceived by Talcott Parsons (1951),Parsons, T. (1951). The social system. New
York, NY: Free Press. the functionalist perspective on health and medicine
emphasizes that good health and effective medical care are essential for a society’s
ability to function. Ill health impairs our ability to perform our roles in society, and
if too many people are unhealthy, society’s functioning and stability suffer. This
was especially true for premature death, said Parsons, because it prevents
individuals from fully carrying out all their social roles and thus represents a “poor
return” to society for the various costs of pregnancy, birth, child care, and
socialization of the individual who ends up dying early. Poor medical care is
likewise dysfunctional for society, as people who are ill face greater difficulty in
becoming healthy and people who are healthy are more likely to become ill.
For a person to be considered legitimately sick, said Parsons, several expectations
must be met. He referred to these expectations as the sick role3
. First, sick people
should not be perceived as having caused their own health problem. If we eat highfat food, become obese, and have a heart attack, we evoke less sympathy than if we
had practiced good nutrition and maintained a proper weight. If someone is driving
drunk and smashes into a tree, there is much less sympathy than if the driver had
been sober and skidded off the road in icy weather.
Second, sick people must want to get well. If they do not want to get well or, worse
yet, are perceived as faking their illness or malingering after becoming healthier,
they are no longer considered legitimately ill by the people who know them or,
more generally, by society itself.
Third, sick people are expected to have their illness confirmed by a physician or
other health-care professional and to follow the professional’s advice and
instructions in order to become well. If a sick person fails to do so, she or he again
loses the right to perform the sick role.
If all of these expectations are met, said Parsons, sick
people are treated as sick by their family, their friends,
and other people they know, and they become exempt
from their normal obligations to all these people.
Sometimes they are even told to stay in bed when they
want to remain active.
Physicians also have a role to perform, said Parsons.
First and foremost, they have to diagnose the person’s
illness, decide how to treat it, and help the person
become well. To do so, they need the cooperation of the
patient, who must answer the physician’s questions
accurately and follow the physician’s instructions.
Parsons thus viewed the physician-patient relationship
as hierarchical: the physician gives the orders (or, more
accurately, provides advice and instructions), and the
patient follows them.
Parsons was certainly right in emphasizing the
importance of individuals’ good health for society’s health, but his perspective has
been criticized for several reasons. First, his idea of the sick role applies more to
acute (short-term) illness than to chronic (long-term) illness. Although much of his
discussion implies a person temporarily enters a sick role and leaves it soon after
following adequate medical care, people with chronic illnesses can be locked into a
sick role for a very long time or even permanently. Second, Parsons’s discussion
ignores the fact, mentioned earlier, that our social location in society in the form of
social class, race and ethnicity, and gender affects both the likelihood of becoming
ill and the quality of medical care we receive. Third, Parsons wrote approvingly of
the hierarchy implicit in the physician-patient relationship. Many experts say today
that patients need to reduce this hierarchy by asking more questions of their
physicians and by taking a more active role in maintaining their health. To the
extent that physicians do not always provide the best medical care, the hierarchy
that Parsons favored is at least partly to blame.

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