My research lies at the intersections of three major arenas within sociology: the sociology of health and illness, of science, technology,and medicine, and of racial, class, and gender inequality. I am particularly interested in tracing the relationships between conceptions of risk, definitions of difference, the organization of biomedical science and clinical practice, and the social and cultural landscape. I use social constructionist and symbolic interactionist approaches to investigate social inequalities in health, particularly heart disease; expert and lay knowledge of disease causation; and knowledge production in biomedicine, public health, and population sciences. In the recent past, I have also examined, in collaboration with Sharon Kaufman and Ann Russ, uses of medical technologies in late life. Publications include, among others, articles in Sociology of Health and Illness, health, Social Studies of Science, and PLoS Medicine. I am currently conducting qualitative research on disciplinary theories and practices in epidemiology aimed at addressing multi-level disease causation and health disparities. I am also working on a book-length project on the uses of racial, socioeconomic, and gender categories in epidemiological research.