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Index
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Index Abel, Emily K., 40–41 Abraham, Laurie, 65, 68–69, 170, 271n2 Acevedo-Garcia, Dolores, 91, 260 acquired immune deficiency syndrome. See HIV/AIDS African Americans, 39; County General Hospital and, 72; expectations regarding medical care, 65; health self-assessment by, 203–204; loss of jobs among, 145; lupus in, 65; northward migration of, 122–123; segregation in inner city neighborhoods, 120–121; storytelling tradition and, 84 Agee, James, 186 AIDS. See HIV/AIDS air circulation system, suspect, 106 The Alchemy of Illness (Duff), 8 alcoholism, 94–95, 186; addict’s indulgence in, 207–208; and noncompliance, 28; susceptibility to disease and, 94–95; in tuberculosis patients, 152–153; Aldrich, Howard, 100 Algren, Nelson, 35 Allen, Robert, 121 Altman, Lawrence K., 55, 102 American Apartheid (Massey and Denton), 120–121 Anderson, Elijah, 126 anti-tuberculosis movement, 39 antibiotics: development of, 53; limitations of, 71; in post–WW II era, 90 antibodies, skin test reactions and, 105 arrogance: health and wealth accompanying , 8–9; of physicians, 83 asthma, in New York City, 261 audiotaping, of interviews, 9; with fieldworkers , 238–254 authority, field-workers and police representing , 156 Bailey, George, 122 Bargaining for Life (Bates), 72 Bates, Barbara, 5, 39, 53, 54, 72 Bayer, Ronald, 189 Becker, Howard, 65 Bethune, Norman, 11 Beyond Caring (Chambliss), 66 Bhavaraju, R., 42, 43 biomedicine: limitations of, 4–5, model of, 258; women and, 195 Black Metropolis (Drake and Cayton), 120 Black Panther Party, 121 Black Power movement, 120, 121–122 Blake, David, 189, 190, 191, 195 blat (social network), 96 Blendon, Robert J., 65 Bock, Naomi N., 102 bodily awareness, 8 Booker, Michael J., 189 Bowden, Charles, 118, 136, 149 Bowditch, Henry I., 37 “bribery.” See negotiation Brody, Howard, 7, 151 Brooks, Durado D., 65 Brown, Phil, 268n1 Brown, Phyllida, 14 Brudney, Karen, 42–43, 44–45 bureaucracy: interaction with, 9; streetlevel , 235 Burns, Edward, 171, 271n1 Butler, Judith, 48, 172 car wash, network example involving, 100–109 care: and coercion, 20, 237; inadequate, and disease recurrence, 189 Carlton Arms, Chicago, 109–114 Carmichael, Stokely, 121 Castells, Manuel, 121 Caudill, Chris, 105, 106, 107 causal webs, concept of, 93 Cayton, Horace, 120 Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 14, 34; publications from, 272n4 Chambliss, Daniel, 66, 68 “chart lore,” 224 Chicago: DOT in, 90, 92; morbidity rates in, 118; racial spatialization in, 89; rates of tuberculosis in (1949), 89–90; resurgence of tuberculosis in (late 1980s), 90–91; riots of 1968 in, 118; 284 social geography of, 88–89; West Side population demographics, 118 Chicago hospitals. See County General Hospital; Maple Grove Hospital Chicago Metropolitan Tuberculosis Coalition , 237 Civil Rights Acts, 121 Civil Rights Movement, 121 Clark, Kenneth B., 119, 121 Cloward, Richard, 52, 54 coercion: care and, 20; and cooperation, 237 Coker, Richard, 189 Coles, Robert, 7 Commonweal, 42, 44 communication, physician-patient, 76–78 communities: ethnic, time expressed in, 150–151; poor, violence in, 172 compassion, politics of, 49 compliance: social nature of, 229, 272n3. See also noncompliance compliance orders, 29 Compstat system, 261 consumption: original beliefs about, 37; romantic myth of, 37; socioeconomic class association with, 38; in women, 39. See also tuberculosis entries conviviality models, 257–258 cooperation, and coercion, 237 Cornwell, Jocelyn, 61 County General Hospital, Chicago, 61; field interview at, 62–65; history of, 72; isolation rooms at, 73–74; and Maple Grove Hospital compared, 78–79; as social center, 73 Dark Ghetto (Clark), 121 death: forms of, 172; frequency among tuberculosis patients, 19; in ghetto, coping with, 173; unpredictability of, 18 “death camp,” hospital perceived as, 165–166, 170 deindustrialization, 91 delinquency. See noncompliance Denton, Nancy, 120–121 depersonalization, of patients, 66, 69 depopulation: effects on inner city areas, 91–92; poverty and, 92–93 detention, involuntary, 2, 29, 190; in New York City, 30, 41, 234; ordering, 29; rationale for, 41 Diamond, Timothy, 69 diet, 41 Dievler, Ann, 43 DiFazio, William, 33 Directly Observed Therapy, 10, 55, 60, 155, 160–161, 270n7; in Chicago, 90, 92; compliance in context of, 272n3; female patients and, 196, 197–198, 202–203; in foreign countries, 261; in New York City, 234–235; for preventive therapy, 252; priority of, 189; success of, 230–231 disaster, routinization of. See Routinization of disaster Discipline and Punish (Foucault), 16 “discursive domination,” 31 disease: categorical treatment of, 76; causation , causal web and terrain concepts in, 93; ghettoized, tuberculosis as, 55; poverty and, 39; transmission of, 138, 206 disorder, coping with, 173 Dobkin, Jay, 42–43 doctors. See physicians Donovan, Jenny, 189, 190, 191...