TY - BOOK AU - Kreps,Gary L. TI - Health communication T2 - SAGE benchmarks in communication SN - 1847875785 AV - R118 U1 - 610.14 22 PY - 2010/// CY - London PB - SAGE KW - Communication in medicine N1 - Includes bibliographical references; Volume 1; Health Communication in the Delivery of Health Care --; 1; Doctor-Patient Communication; Barbara M. Korsch and Vida Francis Negrete --; 2; Information-giving in Medical Consultations: The influence of patients' communicative styles and personal characteristics; Richard L. Street Jr --; 3; The Influence of Human Communication on Health Care Outcomes; Gary L. Kreps, Dan O'Hair and Marsha Clowers --; 4; The Field of Health Communication Today; Everett M. Rogers --; 5; Bridging the Gap: The separate worlds of evidence-based medicine and patient-centered medicine; Jozien Bensing --; 6; The Evolution and Advancement of Health Communication Inquiry; Gary L. Kreps --; 7; Cancer Communications Research and Health Outcomes: Review and challenge; Gary L. Kreps and Daria Chapelsky Massimilla --; 8; The Roter Interaction Analysis System (RIAS): Utility and flexibility for analysis of medical interactions; Debra Roter and Susan Larson --; 9; Interacting With Cancer Patients: The significance of physicians' communication behavior; Neeraj K. Arora --; 10; Health Literacy: Essential for health communication; Ruth M. Parker and Julie A. Gazmararian --; 11; The Impact of Communication on Cancer Risk, Incidence, Morbidity, Mortality, and Quality of life; Gary L.Kreps --; 12; The Relation Between Health-Orientation, Provider-Patient Communication, and Satisfaction: An individual-difference approach; Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman --; 13; Approaching Difficult Communication Tasks in Oncology; Anthony L. Back, Robert M. Arnold, Walter F. Baile, James A. Tulsky and Kelly Fryer-Edwards --; 14; Factors Associated with Patients' Perceptions of Health Care Providers' Communication Behaviour; Lila J. Finney Rutten, Erik Augustson and Kay Wanke --; 15; College Students' Sexual Health: Investigating the role of peer communication; Christine E. Rittenour and Melanie Booth-Butterfield --; 16; A Patient-Centered Approach to Breaking Bad News: Communication guidelines for health care providers; Lisa Sparks, Melinda M. Villagran, Jessica Parker-Raley and Cory B. Cunningham --; 17; The Effects of Communication Skills Training on Pediatricians' and Parents' Communication During "Sick Child" Visits; Nancy Grant Harrington, Gretchen R. Norling, Florence M. Witte, Judith Taylor and James E. Andrews --; 18; The Interdisciplinary Study of Health Communication and its Relationship to Communication Science; Gary L. Kreps, Jim L. Query, Jr., and Ellen W. Bonaguro --; 19; Health Care Partnership Model of Doctor-Patient Communication in Cancer Prevention and Care Among the Aged; Eva Kahana and Boaz Kahana --; 20; Health Behaviors in Cancer Survivors; Deborah K. Mayer, Norma C. Terrin, Usha Menon, Gary L. Kreps, Kathy McCance, Susan K. Parsons and Kathleen H. Mooney --; 21; Cancer Patients as Active Participants in Their Care; Edward Krupat and Julie T. Irish --; 22; A Multiple Discourse Approach to Health Communication: Translational research and ethical practice; Roxanne Parrott --; 23; The Central Role of Strategic Health Communication in Enhancing Breast Cancer Outcomes Across the Continuum of Care in Limited-Resource Countries; Gary L. Kreps and Rama Sivaram --; 24; Ending the End of Life Communication Impasse: A dialogic intervention; John W. Lannamann, Linda M. Harris, Alexis D. Bakos and Kylene J. Baker --; 25; Theoretical Contributions of Interpretive and Critical Research in Health Communication; Heather M. Zoller and Kimberly N. Kline --; Volume 2; Health Communication and Health Promotion --; 26; Social Marketing and Public Health Intervention; R. Craig Lefebvre and June A. Flora --; 27; The Role of Media Across Four Levels of Health Promotion Intervention; June A. Flora, Edward W. Maibach and Nathan Maccoby --; 28; Fear Control and Danger Control: a Test of the Extended Parallel Process Model (EPPM); Kim Witte --; 29; Attention, Need for Sensation, and Health Communication Campaigns; Lewis Donohew, Philip Palmgreen and Elizabeth Pugzles Lorch --; 30; The Manipulative Nature of Health Communication Research; Kim Witte --; 31; Translating Health Psychology Into Effective Health Communication: The American healthstyles audience segmentation project; Edward W. Maibach, Andrew Maxfield, Kelly Ladin and Michael Slater --; 32; Theory and Method in Health Audience Segmentation; Michael D. Slater --; 33; Applications of a Theoretic Model of Information Exposure to Health Interventions; Lewis Donohew, Elizabeth Pugzles Lorch and Philip Palmgreen --; 34; One Size Does Not Fit All: The case for tailoring print materials; Matthew W. Kreuter, Victor J. Strecher and Bernard Glassman --; 35; Avoiding the Boomerang: Testing the relative effectiveness of antidrug public service announcements before a national campaign; Martin Fishbein, Kathleen Hall-Jamieson, Eric Zimmer, Ina von Haeften and Robin Nabi --; 36; Achieving Cultural Appropriateness in Health Promotion Programs: Targeted and tailored approaches; Matthew W. Kreuter, Susan N. Lukwago, Dawn C. Bucholtz, Eddie M. Clark and Vetta Sanders-Thompson --; 37; Lessons Learned from Public Health Mass Media Campaigns: Marketing health in a crowded media world; Whitney Randolph and K. Viswanath --; 38; Theory and Proactive in Health Communications Campaigns: A critical interrogation; Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman --; 39; Specification and Misspecification of Theoretical Foundations and Logic Models for Health Communication Campaigns; Michael D. Slater --; 40; A Social Judgment Theory Approach To Conducting Formative Research in a Social Norms Campaign; Sandi W. Smith, Charles K. Atkin, Dennis Martell, Rebecca Allen and Larry Hembroff --; 41; A 10-Year Retrospective of Research in Health Mass Media Campaigns: Where do we go from here?; Seth M. Noar --; 42; Racial /Ethnic Disparities and Segmentation in Communication Campaigns; Robert C. Hornik and A. Susana Ramirez --; 43; Unintended Effects of Health Communication Campaigns; Hyunyi Cho and Charles T. Salmon --; 44; The Roles of Interpersonal Communication in Mass Media Campaigns; Brian G. Southwell and Marco C. Yzer --; 45; Do Loss-Framed Persuasive Messages Engender Greater Message Processing Than Do Grain-Framed Messages?: A meta-analytic review; Daniel J. O'Keefe and Jakob D. Jensen --; Volume 3; Health Risk Communication --; 46; The Framing of Decisions and The Psychology of Choice; Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman --; 47; Treating the Public With Risk Communication: A public health perspective; Baruch Fischhoff --; 48; Why Rules for Risk Communication Fail: A problem-solving approach to risk communication; Katherine E. Rowan --; 49; Risk Perception and Communication Unplugged: Twenty years of process; Baruch Fischhoff --; 50; Communication Channels and Risk Information; Craig W. Trumbo --; 51; Corporate Environmental Risk Communication: Cases and practices along the Texas Gulf Coast; Robert L. Heath --; 52; Communication, Organization and Crisis; Matthew W. Seeger, Timothy L. Sellnow and Robert R. Ulmer --; 53; Risk Communication in Genetic Testing for Cancer Susceptibility; Robert T. Croyle and Caryn Lerman --; 54; The Visual Communication of Risk; Isaac M. Lipkus and J. G. Hollands --; 55; Heuristic-Systematic Information Processing and Risk Judgment; Craig W. Trumbo --; 56; Informing Women About Their Breast Cancer Risks: Truth and consequences; Isaac Lipkus, Monica Biradavolu, Kathryn Fenn, Punam Keller and Barbara K. Rimer --; 57; The Informatics Response in Disaster, Terrorism and War; Jonathan M. Teich, Michael M. Wagner, Colin F. Mackenzie and Klaus O. Schafer --; 58; The Function of Credibility in Information Processing for Risk Perception; Craig W. Trumbo and Katherine A. McComas --; 59; The "CAUSE" Model: A research-supported guide for physicians communicating cancer risk; Katherine E. Rowan, Lisa Sparks, Loretta Pecchioni and Melinda M. Villagran --; 60; Leave No One Behind: Improving health and risk communication through attention to literacy; Rima E. Rudd, John P. Comings and James N. Hyde --; 61; Best Practices in Public Health Risk and Crisis Communication; Vincent T. Covello --; 62; Communication Lessons Learned in the Emergency Operations Center During CDC's Anthrax Response: A commentary; Marsha L. Vanderford --; 63; Gene Cuisine or Frankenfood? The Theory of Reasoned Action as an Audience Segmentation Strategy for Messages about Genetically Modified Foods; Kami J. Silk, Judith Weiner and Roxanne L.Parrott --; 64; Formats for Improving Risk Communication in Medical Tradeoff Decisions; Erika A. Waters, Neil D. Weinstein, Graham A. Colditz and Karen Emmons --; 65; Social Sides of Health Risks: Stigma and collective efficacy; Rachel A. Smith, Merissa Ferrara and Kim Witte --; 66; Action Not Talk: A simulation of risk communication during the first hours of a pandemic; Vicki S. Freimuth, Karen M. Hilyard, J. Kevin Barge and Lynn A. Sokler --; 67; Crisis and Emergency Risk Communication in a Pandemic: A model for building capacity and resilience of minority communities; Sandra Crouse Quinn --; 68; Effective Communication During an Influenza Pandemic: The value of using a crisis and emergency risk communication framework; Barbara Reynolds and Sandra Crouse Quinn --; 69; Evaluating Emergency Risk Communications: A dialogue with the experts; Craig W. Thomas, Marsha L. Vanderford and Sandra Crouse Quinn --; Volume 4; Health Communication and New Information Technologies (Ehealth) --; 70; New Technologues in Health Communication; Michael A. Chamberlain --; 71; Health Communication on the Internet: An effective channel for health behavior change?; Michael M. Cassell, Christine Jackson and Brian Cheuvront --; 72; Consumers and Evaluation of Interactive Health Communication Applications; David H. Gustafson, Thomas N. Robinson, David Ansley, Linda Adler and Patricia Flatley Brennan --; 73; Computer-Mediated Support Groups: An examination of relationships among social support, perceived stress, and coping strategies; Kevin B. Wright --; 74; Recent Advances: Consumer health informatics; Gunther Eysenbach --; 75; Reducing the Frequency of Errors in Medicine Using Information Technology; David W. Bates, Michael Cohen, Lucian L. Leape, J. Marc Overhage, M. Michael Shabot and Thomas Sheridan --; 76; The Promise and Challenge of eHealth Interventions; Nancy L.Atkinson and Robert S. Gold --; 77; How do Consumers Search for and Appraise Health Information on the World Wide Web ? Qualitative Study Using Focus Groups, Usability Tests, and In-Depth Interviews; G. Eysenbach and C. Kohnler --; 78; Rethinking Communication in the E-Health Era; L. Neuhauser and G.L. Kreps --; 79; Tailored Messages for Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening of Low-Income and Minority Women Using Medical Records Data; M.L. Jibaja-Weiss, R. Volk, P. Kingery, Q.W. Smith and J.D. Holcomb --; 80; Assessing Communication Competence in an Online Study: Toward informing subsequent interventions among older adults with cancer, their lay caregivers, and peers; J.L. Query Jr and K.B. Wright --; 81; Health-Related Support Groups on the Internet: Linking empirical findings to social support and computer-mediated communication theory; K.B. Wright and S.B. Bell --; 82; The First Generation of e-Patients; T. Ferguson and G. Frydman --; 83; Health Related Virtual Communities and Electronic Support Groups: Systematic review of the effects of online peer to peer interactions; G. Eysenbach, J. Powell, M. Englesakis, C. Rizo and A. Sten --; 84; How New Subscribers Use Cancer-Related Online Mailing Lists; B.K. Rimer, E.J. Lyons, K.M. Ribisl, J.M. Bowling, C.E. Golin, M.J. Forlenza and A. Meier --; 85; Emerging Technologies for Cancer Prevention and Other Population Health Challenges; T.R. Eng --; 86; Creating a Framework for Online Cancer Services Research to Facilitate Timely and Interdisciplinary Applications; P. Whitten, G.L. Kreps and M.S. Eastin --; 87; Reducing the Cancer Burden of Lifestyle Factors: Opportunities and challenges of the Internet; A.L. Graham and D.B. Abrams --; 88; What Is eHealth (6): Perspectives on the evolution of ehealth research; D.K. Ahern, J.M. Kreslake and J.M. Phalen --; 89; Telemedicine: Its effects on health communication; J. Matusitz and G.M. Breen --; 90; Use of the Internet to Communication with Health Care Providers in the United States: Estimates from the 2003 and 2005 Health Information National Trends Surveys (HINTS); E.B. Beckjord, L.J. Finney Rutten, L. Squiers, N.K. Arora, L. Volckmann, R.P. Moser and B.W. Hesse --; 91; Health Communication Technology and Quality of Cancer Care; L.M. Harris, G.L. Kreps and C. Dresser --; 92; Can E-Mail Messages Between Patients and Physicians Be Patient-Centered?; D.L. Roter, S. Larson, D.Z. Sands, D.E. Ford and T. Houston --; 93; Online Participation: A content analysis of differences in utilization of two online cancer communities by men and women, patients and family members; T. Ginossar --; 94; A Review of Web-Assisted Tobacco Interventions (WATIs); B.C. Bock, A.L. Graham, J.A. Whiteley and J.L Stoddard --; 95; The Role of Message Tailoring in the Development of Persuasive Health Communication Messages; S.M. Noar, N.G. Harrington and R.S. Aldrich --; Volume 5; Health Communication and the Health Care System --; 96; Information Giving in Medical Care; Howard Waitzkin --; 97; Communication Practices in the Social Construction of Health in an AIDS residence; Lawrence R. Frey, Mara B. Adelman and Jim L. Query, Jr --; 98; Tailoring Communications for Primary Care Settings; B. K. Rimer and B. Glassman --; 99; Helping Patients Access High Quality Health Information; Sasha Shepperd, Deborah Charnock and Bog Gann --; 100; Entertainment-Education and Social Change: an Analysis of Parasocial Interaction, Social Learning, Collective Efficacy, and Paradoxical Communication; Michael J. Papa, Arvind Singhal, Sweety Law, Saumya Pant, Suruchi Sood, Everett M. Rogers and Corrine L. Shefner-Rogers --; 101; Participatory Design for Better Interactive Health Communication: a Statewide Model in the USA; Linda Neuhauser --; 102; A Theoretical Agenda for Entertainment-Education; Arvind Singhal and Everett M. Rogers --; 103; A Strategy to Reduce Cross-Cultural Miscommunication and Increase the Likelihood of Improving Health Outcomes; Marjorie Kagawa-Singer and Shaheen Kassim-Lakha --; 104; Bridging the Digital Divide: Reaching Vulnerable Populations; Betty L. Chang, Suzanne Bakken, S. Scott Brown, Thomas K. Houston, Gary L. Kreps, Rita Kukafka, Charles Safran and P. Zoe Stavri --; 105; The Internet as a Vehicle to Communicate Health Information during a Public Health Emergency: a Survey Analysis Involving the Anthrax Scare of; Anne F. Kittler, John Hobbs, Lynn A. Volk, Gary L. Kreps and David W. Bates --; 106; The Contributions of Health Communication to Eliminating Health Disparities; Vicki S, Freimuth and Sandra Crouse Quinn --; 107; An Ecological Framework for Cancer Communication: Implications for Research; Kevin Patrick, Stephen S. Intille and Marion F. Zabinski --; 108; Family Communication and Genetic Health: a Research Note; Judith L. Weiner, Kami J. Silk and Roxanne L. Parrott --; 109; On Addressing Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities: The Potential Role of Patient Communication Skills Interventions; Donald J. Cegela and Douglas M. Post --; 110; Communication and Racial Inequities in Health Care; Gary L. Kreps --; 111; Tailored Interventions in Public Health: Where Does Tailoring Fit in Interventions to Reduce Public Health Disparities; Marci Kramish Campbell and Lisa M. Quintiliani --; 112; The Relationship of Media Attention to Colorectal Cance-Related Risk Appraisals in Older Japanese Americans: Using Structural Equation Modelling to Develop an Explanatory Model; Keiko Honda and Gary L. Kreps --; 113; The NCI Digital Divide Pilot Projects: Implications for Cancer Education; Gary L. Kreps, David Gustafson, Peter Salovey, Rosemarie Slevin Perocchia, Wayne Wilbright, Mary Anne Bright and Cathy Muha --; 114; Communication and Marketing as Tools to Cultivate the Public's Health: a proposed "people and places" framework; Edward W. Maibach, Lorien C. Abroms and Mark Marosits ER -