Health CareSocial Issues
Interdisciplinary Programs, EBU 3B
Computer Science and Engineering Building
Room 1114, Warren College
http://hcsi.ucsd.edu
All courses, faculty listings, and curricular and degree requirements described herein are subject to change or deletion without notice. Updates to curricular sections may be found on the Academic Senate website: http://senate.ucsd.edu/Curriculum/Updates.htm.
Health Care–Social Issues is an interdisciplinary minor designed to enhance students’ competence in analyzing the complex social and ethical implications of health care controversies, policies, and delivery systems. Students gain an understanding of how the economy, culture, technology, and sociological and psychological processes influence modern health care. Although it is administered by Warren College, it is available to all UC San Diego undergraduate students with a general interest in health care as well as students considering careers in health care. This minor offers students the opportunity to examine health care from the perspectives of a wide range of disciplines, including anthropology, biology, cognitive science, economics, ethnic studies, global health, philosophy, psychology, sociology, and urban studies. This interdisciplinary curriculum offers a breadth of intellectual perspectives, enhancing students’ undergraduate education and preparing them for professional or graduate education in one of health care’s many disciplines.
Students should consult an academic adviser at their college to determine how the Health Care–Social Issues minor can best meet their college graduation requirements. Minor declarations must be made online using the TritonLink major and minor application.
Students are urged to supplement the Health Care–Social Issues minor with a health-related internship. The Academic Internship Program offers internship placements in clinical settings and with medical research teams that provide valuable experience, career clarification, and an opportunity to apply theories learned in course work.
Further information on the program is available at the Warren College Interdisciplinary Programs Office.
Health Care–Social Issues
Minor Requirements
The minor consists of three required courses and four elective courses. At least five courses must be taken at the upper-division level. Upper-division courses must not overlap with courses in the student’s major. No more than three courses may be taken in any one discipline. For full descriptions of the following courses, see department listings.
Required Courses
Sociology 40—Sociology of Health-Care Issues
Philosophy 163—Biomedical Ethics
One course in Urban Studies and Planning chosen from the following:
143—The US Health-Care System
144—Environmental and Preventive Health Issues
145—Aging: Social and Health Policy Issues
147—Case Studies in Health-Care Programs/Poor and Underserved Population
Elective Course Options
Anthropology
ANTH 2—Human Origins
ANBI 100—Special Topics in Biological Anthropology (topic approval required)
ANBI 141—The Evolution of Human Diet
ANSC 100—Special Topics in Sociocultural Anthropology (topic approval required)
ANSC 146—A Global Health Perspective on HIV
ANSC 164—The Anthropology of Medicine
Biology
BILD 36—AIDS, Science, and Society
BILD 38—Dementia, Science, and Society
BICD 136—AIDS, Science, and Society
Cognitive Science
174—Drugs: Brain, Mind, and Culture
Economics
140—Economics of Health Producers
141—Economics of Health Consumers
Ethnic Studies
102—Science and Technology in Society: Race, Gender, and Class
142—Medicine, Race, and the Global Politics of Inequality
157—Madness and Urbanization: Social Identities and Mental Health/Illness in the Twentieth-Century American Metropolis
Global Health
GLBH 181—Essentials of Global Health
History
HILD 30—History of Public Health
HISC 115—History of Modern Medicine
HISC 116—History of Bioethics
HISC 174—History of Localization of Brain Function
Philosophy
147—Philosophy of Biology
148—Philosophy and the Environment
151—Philosophy of Neuroscience
162—Contemporary Moral Issues
164—Technology and Human Values
Psychology
2—General Psychology: Biological Foundations
60—Introduction to Statistics
104—Introduction to Social Psychology
124—Introduction to Clinical Psychology
132—Hormones and Behavior
134—Eating Disorders
154—Behavior Modification
155—Social Psychology and Medicine
163—Abnormal Psychology
168—Psychological Disorders of Childhood
169—Brain Damage and Mental Function
172—Psychology of Human Sexuality
179—Drugs, Addiction, and Mental Disorders
181—Drugs and Behavior
188—Impulse Control Disorders
Sociology
Soc 60—The Practice of Social Research
Soc 107—Epidemiological Methods: Statistical Study of Diseases
Soc 113—Sociology of the AIDS Epidemic
Soc 120T—Special Topics in Culture, Language, and Social Interaction (topic approval required)
Soc 134E—The Making of Modern Medicine
Soc 135—Medical Sociology
Soc 136E—Sociology of Mental Illness: A Historical Approach
Soc 136F—Sociology of Mental Illness in Contemporary Society
Soc 138—Genetics and Society
Soc 143—Suicide
Soc 159—Special Topics in Social Organizations and Institutions (topic approval required)
Urban Studies and Planning
143—The US Health-Care System
144—Environmental and Preventive Health Issues
145—Aging: Social and Health Policy Issues
147—Case Studies in Health-Care Programs/Poor and Underserved Population
Students may petition to substitute courses in the minor that have substantial content related to health care and society. Petitions should be submitted to the Warren College Interdisciplinary Programs Office.
Recommended Internship Experience
A health care related internship (AIP 197) is recommended and should be arranged at least one quarter in advance through the Academic Internship Program, Literature Building, Second Floor, http://aip.ucsd.edu/. Clinical and research placements are available.
Faculty Advisory Committee
Steven Adler, Provost, Earl Warren College; Professor, Theatre and Dance
Gerald Doppelt, Professor, Philosophy
John Evans, Associate Professor, Sociology
Catherina Gere, Associate Professor, History
Leslie Lewis, Lecturer, Urban Studies and Planning
Dana Nelkin, Associate Professor, Philosophy
Andrew Scull, Professor, Sociology