Rethinking Culture in Health Communication
Wiley-Blackwell (Verlag)
978-1-119-49616-8 (ISBN)
Patients, health professionals, and policymakers embody cultural constructs that impact healthcare processes. Rethinking Culture in Health Communication explores the ways in which culture influences healthcare, introducing new approaches to understanding social relationships and health policies as a dynamic process involving cultural values, expectations, motivations, and behavioral patterns. This innovative textbook integrates theories and practices in health communication, public health, and medicine to help students relate fundamental concepts to their personal experiences and develop an awareness of how all individuals and groups are shaped by culture.
The authors present a foundational framework explaining how cultures can be understood from four perspectives—Magic Consciousness, Mythic Connection, Perspectival Thinking, and Integral Fusion—to examine existing theories, social norms, and clinical practices in health-related contexts. Detailed yet accessible chapters discuss culture and health behaviors, interpersonal communication, minority health and healthcare delivery, cultural consciousness, social interactions, sociopolitical structure, and more. The text features examples of how culture can create challenges in access, process, and outcomes of healthcare services and includes scenarios in which individuals and institutions hold different or incompatible ethical views. The text also illustrates how cultural perspectives can shape the theoretical concepts emerged in caregiver-patient communication, provider-patient interactions, social policies, public health interventions, and other real-life settings. Written by two leading health communication scholars, this textbook:
Highlights the sociocultural, interprofessional, clinical, and ethical aspects of health communication
Explores the intersections of social relationships, cultural tendencies, and health theories and behaviors
Examines the various forms, functions, and meanings of health, illness, and healthcare in a range of cultural contexts
Discusses how cultural elements in social interactions are essential to successful health interventions
Includes foundational overviews of health communication and of culture in health-related fields
Discusses culture in health administration, moral values in social policies, and ethics in medical development
Incorporates various aspects and impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic as a cultural phenomenon through the lens of health communication
Rethinking Culture in Health Communication is an ideal textbook for courses in health communication, particularly those focused on interpersonal communication, as well as in cross-cultural communication, cultural phenomenology, medical sociology, social work, public health, and other health-related fields.
Elaine Hsieh, Ph.D., J.D. is Professor at the Department of Communication, University of Oklahoma, and a Visiting Professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. An award-winning author, Fulbright Scholar, and NIH-funded researcher, she has published extensively to examine the intersections of culture, language, health, and medicine in interpersonal and cross-cultural contexts. She is currently Associate Editor for Health Communication. She has served as the Chair of the Health Communication Division at the National Communication Association and as Associate Editor for the Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health (2010-2017). Eric Mark Kramer, Ph.D. is Presidential Professor of Communication and Affiliate Faculty in the College of International and Area Studies and the Department of Film and Media Studies at the University of Oklahoma. He is Senior Editor of The Oxford University Research Encyclopedia on Communication, International and Global Communication, Associate Editor of the Journal of Intercultural Communication Research, a founding Director of the EU Institute for Studies in Comparative Civilizations, author and editor of 11 books.
Acknowledgment ix
1 Rethinking Culture in Health Communication 1
2 Cultural Consciousness I: Magic Consciousness and Emotions in Health 26
3 Cultural Consciousness II: Mythic Connection and the Social Meanings of Health and Illness 51
4 Cultural Consciousness III: Perspectival Thinking and the Emergence of Modern Medicine 80
5 Cultural Consciousness IV: Integral Fusion and Health Professionals in Healthcare Settings 107
6 Culture and Health Behaviors: Culture Assumptions in Health Theories and Practices 138
7 Health Literacy: Cultural Approaches to Health Behaviors and Decision-Making 163
8 Group-Based Identities: Cultural Approaches to Social Stigma and Health Practices 192
9 Uncertainty in Health and Illness: From Perspectival Thinking to Integral Fusion 226
10 Social Support: Understanding Supportive Relationships Through Cultural Perspectives 257
11 Transformative Technologies: Cultural Approaches to Technologies in Health Contexts 293
12 Health Disparities: Observations and Solutions Through Different Cultural Approaches 328
13 When Cultural Perspectives Collide: Community-Based Health Interventions in Marginalized Populations 368
14 Distributive Justice: Embedding Equity and Justice in Structural Barriers and Health Policies 404
Index 445
Erscheinungsdatum | 09.03.2021 |
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Verlagsort | Hoboken |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 178 x 252 mm |
Gewicht | 748 g |
Themenwelt | Geisteswissenschaften ► Psychologie |
Studium ► Querschnittsbereiche ► Prävention / Gesundheitsförderung | |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Soziologie | |
ISBN-10 | 1-119-49616-0 / 1119496160 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-119-49616-8 / 9781119496168 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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