1. Anthony Giddens
Why him:
Giddens gives you structure + agency — perfect for health.
• Our lives are shaped by systems (hospitals, insurance, pharmaceuticals)
• But we still make choices (diet, risk, compliance, resistance)
• Health lives right in that tension
Radio-friendly takeaway:
“You didn’t choose the system you got sick in — but you’re expected to act responsibly inside it.”
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2. Anna Kirkland (the “someone new”)
Why she’s great:
Kirkland studies how health gets turned into policy, especially around:
• disability
• gender
• risk
• law and regulation
She shows how bureaucracy quietly decides whose pain counts.
Radio-friendly takeaway:
“Health isn’t just medical — it’s legal, political, and paper-based.”
She’s contemporary, sharp, and not overexposed — very UcOtt.
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3. Paul Farmer (boots-on-the-ground)
Why he’s gold:
Farmer was:
• a medical doctor
• a sociologist/anthropologist
• and a full-on troublemaker (in the best sense)
He coined “structural violence” in health:
People don’t just get sick — they are made vulnerable by poverty, racism, and politics.
Radio-friendly takeaway:
“If the cure exists but you can’t reach it, that’s not biology — that’s sociology.”
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The 12 Segments (≈10 minutes each)
I’ll flag the six intersections from your classic 12 that we explicitly include.
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1. Opening the Door: Why Health Is Social
Medicine treats bodies.
Sociology treats patterns.
(Sets the frame, no jargon)
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2. Structure & Agency (Giddens)
Why patients are told to “take responsibility”
inside systems they didn’t design.
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3. Class & Inequality ✅
Who lives longer.
Who waits longer.
Who gets blamed.
(Paul Farmer shines here)
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4. Politics ✅
Healthcare systems don’t “evolve” — they’re chosen.
Public vs private.
Who benefits.
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5. Medical Authority & Trust
Why we trust doctors — and why trust breaks.
(Great place for humour and personal reflection)
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6. Gender ✅
Pain not believed.
Bodies studied differently.
Care work feminized.
(Kirkland fits beautifully here)
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7. Race & Colonial History ✅
Different outcomes for the same illnesses.
Not accidental. Not genetic.
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8. The Medical-Industrial Complex
Pharmaceuticals, devices, billing codes.
Where health meets profit.
(Echoes your Eisenhower instincts)
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9. Age ✅
Children, seniors, and who gets prioritized.
Why “aging well” is treated as a moral obligation.
(This will land hard with your seniors)
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10. Education ✅
Health literacy.
Who understands the system — and who’s punished for not understanding it.
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11. Resistance, Care, and Harm Reduction
People don’t always “comply.”
Sometimes that’s wisdom.
(Canada does well here — worth noting)
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12. Gentle Landing: Being Sick Is Not a Failure
A human ending, not a technical one.
“Health is not a personal achievement.
It’s a social arrangement.”