ABSTRACT

This volume explores the nature of health and health-care experiences in Russia by comparing societies and communities with different socio-cultural conditions. The unique use of longitudinal data collected over ten years, allows the authors to address key questions on Russians individual experiences of health care and their understanding of its influencing factors. They explore the methods of self treatment and illness prevention in combination with the effects poverty and treatment availability can have on the standards of living for the people surveyed. This pertinent issue follows a time of rapidly worsening health status amongst the Russian population and a grave decline in male life expectancy. The findings are set within the context of experience from Finland and the UK, allowing the authors to explore the challenge of the Russian health-care crisis to Western European models of health status and health care.

part |2 pages

Part I Health Beliefs in the New Russia

part |2 pages

Part II Health and Social Structure

chapter 4|18 pages

Inequalities and Health

chapter 5|22 pages

Poverty in Post-Reform Russia

chapter 7|24 pages

Health and Employment

part |2 pages

Part III Health and Social Action