The subject of social medicine is to determine connections between epidemiology, socio-economic status and to investigate how to organize activities of health to improve the overall health conditions in a community. Throughout the history of modern medicine, social determinants of health have not been researched to any greater extent in relation to physiologic or pathologic perspectives on the concept of health and disease. Yet in the past half-century, the attitudes toward this have changed to cover ideas about social interactions in the definition of what health and disease mean to us. In this paper, I will discuss some of the social determinants of health, including of a functioning support groups, socio economic status and level of education