Spelling suggestions: "subject:"chealth communmunication"" "subject:"chealth commoncommunication""
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The effects of a thank-you letter and/or phone call to first-time volunteer blood donorsDe Neffe, Larkey Sheldon 01 January 1987 (has links)
This study measures two reinforcement strategies designed to increase repeat donations in first-time volunteer blood donors.
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Agency, participation, and cancer stories on Instagram: A narrative analysis of the Networked Oncological Causers in Brazilde Cavalho, Raiana 25 November 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Communicating Emotion Management: Improving Mental Health Self-care for Chinese Emerging AdultsXin, Chen 04 November 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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Just Walk/Walk with a Doc: Organizing for HealthField-Springer, Kimberly R. 10 June 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Leadership Perspectives on Offering Social Support: Problematic Integration and the Health CrisisFee, Stefani M. 08 May 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Skin Deep: Body Modification and Agentic Identities Among Women with Skin ConditionsWalonski, Christopher 01 May 2021 (has links)
This study explores processes of identity construction among women who have skin conditions and body modifications. Analyzing seven semi-structured qualitative interviews, the author examines how individuals affected by skin conditions employ body modification practices to organize their identities and promote feelings of agency across both personal and social domains. Engaging a Bakhtinian dialogic lens, the author argues that body modification may operate as a de-stigmatization strategy that supports individuals with skin conditions in cultivating a sense of self-determination and bodily sovereignty. Shaped by grounded theory, this study’s findings trace relationships between body modification and the development of agentic identities among women with skin conditions. Confronted by medical, physical, and social disenfranchisement, women affected by skin conditions may implement body modification practices to navigate treatment, incorporate their conditions, and negotiate their relationships. The author additionally suggests implications for the application of body modification practices as somatic therapeutic modalities.
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Examining Patient-Physician Communication as a Form of Mutual Persuasion using the Conversational Argument Coding SchemeKanthala, Pritam 01 January 2023 (has links) (PDF)
Communication between the patient and the physician in clinical encounters has traditionally been considered a passive interaction on the side of the patient, whereby the healthcare provider examines the patient's condition and circumstances, evaluates the situation, and prescribes a certain treatment plan or procedural solution that will heal the patient's ailment. However, recent research and fundamental communications understanding strongly emphasizes that effective communication is a two-way endeavor that ideally should involve input and insight from both sides of the conversation. Treating all clinical interactions as a one-way didactic experience where a provider usually goes through a checklist of commonalities would seem to not approach the same level of patient satisfaction and understanding as active mutual participation employing common conversational and argumentative techniques by both sides of the patient-physician dyad. The Conversational Argument Coding Scheme, presented by Canary et al., was implemented in a slightly modified format to code transcripts of clinical encounters in a college setting. It was demonstrated that clinical encounters employing more forms of conversational argumentation did not statistically correlate to increased ratings of patient satisfaction/knowledge, but did not harm these ratings in a significant manner. This could be due to the limitation that the study was conducted with a patient population consisting entirely of enrolled college students on campus, implying a greater degree of health literacy and education level that highlights that a presence or lack of teach-back or other mutual participation would not significantly affect patient satisfaction/knowledge in the clinical encounter. Further research needs to be conducted to prove this correlation, but as of now, it would be in good practice and in good faith for healthcare providers to employ teach-back or to encourage mutual participation and conversation in their clinical encounters.
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HIV/AIDS Knowledge, Attitudes, Involvement, and Predictors of Condom Use Among African American College Students: Implications for Communication Strategies for HIV/AIDS PreventionMoore, DaKysha 08 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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It’s the Thought that Counts: Framed Exercise Outcomes Differentially Influence Physical Activity in Young AdultsGallagher, Kristel M. 24 September 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Liking of Specific Tobacco Advertisements as a Mediator of Individual Difference Influences on Contemporaneous Susceptibility and Change in Use after 12 MonthsLoiewski, Christopher, Loiewski January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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