ヘルスコミュニケーション研究リソース
Health Communication Studies, a bibliographical guide
解説:池田光穂
ヘルスコミュニケーション読本(セージ社 2010年のアンソロジー)
ヘルスコミュニケーション(ヘルス・コミュニケーション, health communication)は「健康と病気にかんする保健領域における(個人対個人、個人対集団、集団対集団などの様々なタイプの)対人コミュニケー ション」のことだとひとまず定義することができる。また別の言い方をすると、ヘルスコミュニケーションとは、対象となる個人や集団の(定義がいかなるもの であれ)「よい健康 」(good health)というアウトカムを求めるコ ミュニケーションの実践と研究のことであるとも言える[→出典]
2010年にセージ社が出した、『ヘルスコミュニケーション』論文のアンソロジーの5巻本は、その意味で今日におけるこの分野の網羅的な領域を カバーしており、これからヘルスコミュニケーションを研究しようとする学生や大学院生には、よい論文集になっている[→下記の黄色い文字カバーがデザインされた本です]。
Health Communication, 5 vols, 2010. Edited by: Gary L Kreps; George Mason University. Sage, ISBN: 978-1-84787-578-5
各巻のタイトル
Volume 1: Health Communication in the Delivery of Health Care(ヘルスコミュニケーションと健康ケアの供給)
Volume 2: Health Communication and Health Promotion(ヘルスコミュニケーションとヘルスプロモーション)
Volume 3: Health Risk Communication (ヘルスリスクコミュニケーション)
Volume 5: Health Communication and the Health Care System(ヘルスコミュニケーションとヘルスケアシステム)
Volume 4: Health Communication and New Information Technologies (eHealth)(ヘルスコミュニケーションと新しいIT技術=eーヘルス)
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 Influences of Human Communication on Health Outcomes Gary L. Kreps, Dan Q'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 f. 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 Behavior Lila f. 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 f. 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: Ethical Issues and Guidelines 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 DonohetD, Elizabeth Pugz/es Lorch and Philip Palmgreen
34. One Size Does Not Fit All: The Case for Tailoring Print Materials Matthew W. Kreuter, Victor f. 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 Practice in Health Communication 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 la-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 Th1n Do Gain-Framed Messages? A Meta-Analytic Review Daniel]. O'Keefe and Jakob D. Jensen I
Volume 3: Health Risk Communication
46. The Framing of Decisions and the Psychology of Choice Amos Tversky and Dani‾l Kahneman
47. Treating the public with risk communication: A public health perspective Baich Fischhoff
48. Why Rules for Risk Communication Are Not Enough: A Problem-Solving Approrch to Risk Communication Katherine E. Rowan "
49. Risk Perception and Communication Unplugged: Twenty Years of Process Ba7'4ch Fischhoff
50. Communication Channels and Risk Information: A Cost Utility Model Craig wi Trumbo
51. Corporate Environmental Risk Communication: Cases and Practices Along the ‾exas 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 Aid for PhYSicians Communicating with Patients about 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]. 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 Technologies in Health Communication: Progress or Panacea? 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 Gunther Eysenbach and Christian Kohler
78. Rethinking Communication in the E-Health Era Linda Neuhauser and Gary L. Kreps
79. Tailored Messages for Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening of Low-Income and Minority Women Using Medical Records Data Maria L. Jibaja-Weiss, Robert]. Volk, Paul Kingery, Quentin W Smith and]. David Holcomb
80. Assessing Communication Competence in an Online Study: Toward Informing Subsequent Interventions among Older Adults with Cancer, Their Lay Caregivers, and Peers Jim L. Query, Jr. and Kevin Wright
81. Health-Related Support Groups on the Internet: Linking Empirical Findings to Social Support and Computer-Mediated Communication Theory Kevin B. Wright and Sally B. Bell
82. The First Generation of e-Patients Tom Ferguson and Gilles Frydman
83. Health Related Virtual Communities and Electronic Support Groups: Systematic Review of the Effects of Online Peer to Peer Interactions Gunther Eysenbach, John Powell, Marina Englesakis, Carlos Rizo and Anita Stem
84. How New Subscribers Use Cancer-Related Online Mailing Lists Barbara K. Rimer, Elizabeth J. Lyons, Kurt M. Ribisl, J. Michael Bowling, Carol E. Golin, Michael J. Forlenza and Andrea Meier
8S. Emerging Technologies for Cancer Prevention and Other Population Health Challenges Thomas R. Eng
86. Creating a Framework for Online Cancer Services Research to Facilitate Timely and Interdisciplinary Applications Pamela Whitten, Gary L. Kreps and Matthew S. Eastin
87. Reducing the Cancer Burden of Lifestyle Factors: Opportunities and Challenges of the Internet Amanda L. Graham and David B. Abrams
88. What Is eHealth (6): Perspectives on the Evolution of eHealth Research David K. Ahem, Jennifer M. Kreslake and Judith M. Phalen
89. Telemedicine: Its Effects on Health Communication Jonathan Matusitz and Gerald-Mark Breen
90. Use of the Internet to Communicate with Health Care Providers in the United States: Estimates from the 2003 and 200S Health Information National Trends Surveys (HINTS) Ellen Burke Beckjord, Lila f. Finney Rutten, Linda Squiers, Neeraj K. Arora, Lindsey Volckmann, Richard P. Moser and Bradford W. Hesse
91. Health Communication Technology and Quality of Cancer Care Linda M. Harris, Gary L. Kreps and Connie Dresser 92. Can E-Mail Messages between Patients and Physicians Be Patient-Centered? Debra L. Roter, Susan Larson, Daniel Z. Sands, Daniel E. Ford and Thomas Houston
93. Online Participation: A Content Analysis of Differences in Utilization of Two Online Cancer Communities by Men and Women, Patients and Family Members Tamar Ginossar
94. A Review of Web-Assisted Tobacco Interventions (WATIs) Beth C. Bock, Amanda L. Graham, Jessica A. Whiteley and Jacqueline L. Stoddard
95. The Role of Message Tailoring in the Development of Persuasive Health Communication Messages Seth Noar, Nancy Grant Harrington and Rosalie 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 Communication for Primary Care Settings B.K. Rimer and B. Glassman
99. Helping Patients Access High Quality Health Information Sasha Shepperd, Deborah Charnock and Bob 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 Corinne 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
lO5. The Internet as a Vehicle to Communicate Health Information during a Public Health Emergency: A Survey Analysis Involving the Anthrax Scare of 2001 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. Cegala 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 Health Disparities? Marci Kramish Campbell and Lisa M. Quintiliani
112. The Relationship of Media Attention to Colorectal Cancer-Related Risk Appraisals in Older Japanese Americans: Using Structural Equation Modeling 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
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