Applications in Health Communication: Emerging Trends
Häftad, Engelska, 2013
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Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.A valuable resource for the health communication scholar, Applications in Health Communication: Emerging Trends presents a wide array of essays from a variety of methodological approaches.
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2013-11-07
- Mått184 x 232 x 18 mm
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- Antal sidor390
- FörlagKendall/Hunt Publishing Co ,U.S.
- ISBN9781465237873
Tillhör följande kategorier
- Unit One: Health and Disease PreventionChapter 1: Communicating Cancer: Media Agenda Building for Health Promotion in SingaporeAngela Ka Ying Mak, Monash University; Augustine Pang, Nanyang Technological UniversityChapter 2: Designing a Disclosure-Focused Stigma Intervention for Mental Health ResearchAmanda Carpenter & Kathryn Greene, Rutgers UniversityChapter 3: It Happens to Those People: Phenomenological Study of HIV in the MediaMalynnda A. Johnson, Carroll UniversityChapter 4: Strategies: A Case Study of the Skin Cancer Specialty ClinicMichael H. Eaves Valdosta State UniversityUnit Two: Medical Tourism and Culture in MedicineChapter 5: Tourism: The Role of Communication Regarding Risks and Benefits of Obtaining Medical Services AbroadKevin B. Wright, George Mason University & Alicia Mason, Pittsburgh State UniversityChapter 6: Traditional Chinese Medicine as Emerging Domain for Health Communication StudyJim Schnell, Ohio Dominican UniversityChapter 7: Cultural Considerations in Health Care PracticesNan Yu & Charles Okigbo, North Dakota State UniversityUnit Three: Health in Later LifeChapter 8: Health Communication in the Context of Aging: The Development of an Intergenerational Communication Intervention to Reduce Biases and DiscriminationKate Magsamen-Conrad, Lisa Hanasono, & China Billotte-Verhoff, Bowling Green State UniversityChapter 9: Spousal Caregiver Narratives and Credible Authority: Uncertainty in Illness of Spousal CaregiversKaren Sodowsky, Valdosta State UniversityChapter 10: Ensuring a Good Death: Where Communication Can InterveneEmily M. Cramer, University of Wisconsin-MilwaukeeUnit Four: Research in HealthChapter 11: Family Communication Patterns, Illness Attitudes, and the Willingness to Disclose Symptoms to ParentsNathan Miczo & Lisa Miczo, Western Illinois UniversityChapter 12: The Ventria Venture: Communicating Health Risks and Rewards of Genetically Modified CropsRoy Schwartzman, University of North Carolina, GreensboroChapter 13: Using the Right Cues: Directions and Implications for Communication of Health Related Information Through Social MediaPatric R. Spence, University of Kentucky; Kenneth A. Lachlan, University of Massachusetts, Boston, & Xialing Lin, University of KentuckyChapter 14: Toward a Framework for the Study of Communication and Ocular Health and Disease: Lessons From a Personal Narrative of Vision LossPeter M. Kellett, University of North Carolina GreensboroChapter 15: The Moderating Role of Empathy in Patient Outcomes: A Proposed Model to Reframe the Debate between Biomedical and Patient-Centered ApproachesPatricia E. Gettings, Purdue UniversityUnit Five: Alternative Perspectives in HealthChapter 16: Forms and Facets of Effective Support Provision from Friends and Family: Recipient Perspectives among People Coping with Eating DisordersJessica E. Akey, University of New York, Fredonia; Hsin Lin, University at Buffalo—The State University of New York; I-Hsuan Chiu, University at Buffalo—The State University of New York; Lance Rintamaki, University of Buffalo—The State University of New YorkChapter 17: Communication and Healthy Sexual Practices: Toward a Holistic Communicology of SexualityJimmie Manning, Northern Illinois UniversityChapter 18: Mexican-American Women and HealthEmma K. Wertz, Kennesaw State UniversityChapter 19: Running Dialogue: The Social and Communicative Experience of Running TogetherTessa M. DuBois, University of North Carolina, GreensboroChapter 20: When Family Bullying Mandates Medical Error: Redefining Elder AbuseSusan L. Cook, Metro State University of DenverChapter 21: Communicating Sex-Positive Sexuality Education: Benefits and Strategies of an Emerging ApproachJessica A. Nodulman, University of New MexicoIndex
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