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Contribution to Book
Sickle Cell Disease: A Biopsychosocial Model
Handbook of Black American Health: The Mosaic of Conditions, Issues, Policies, and Prospects (1994)
  • Joseph Telfair
  • Kermit B. Nash
Abstract
Prior to employment at Georgia Southern University, Joseph Telfair authored "Sickle Cell Disease: A Biopsychosocial Model" in Handbook of Black American Health: The Mosaic of Conditions, Issues, Policies, and Prospects.

Book Summary: It is estimated that there are 60,000 excess Black American deaths annually compared with White Americans. Not only do Black babies die earlier than White babies, but, in recent years, there are reports that while life expectancy for Whites has improved, for Blacks there has been a leveling off, if not a reduction. These are among the issues detailed in this important guide to the major causes of Black illness and death.

Divided into 27 chapters, this handbook provides a mosaic of the conditions, issues, and policies related to Black American health. The more than 40 contributing authors, drawn from institutions across the country, are the premier scholars in their respective fields. The scope and multidisciplinary nature of the handbook makes it invaluable for those concerned with contemporary Black society, clinical medicine, epidemiology, health care administration, medical sociology, nursing, nutrition, public health, social work, and public policy.
Keywords
  • Sickle Cell Disease,
  • Biopsychosocial model
Disciplines
Publication Date
1994
Editor
Ivor Lensworth Livingston
Publisher
Greenwood Publishing
ISBN
978-0-313-03459-6
Citation Information
Joseph Telfair and Kermit B. Nash. "Sickle Cell Disease: A Biopsychosocial Model" Handbook of Black American Health: The Mosaic of Conditions, Issues, Policies, and Prospects (1994) p. 123 - 139
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/joseph_telfair/170/