The purpose of this chapter is to take an intergroup communication perspective as applicable to health care contexts. This chapter will first outline the major tenets of social identity for patients and providers in health care contexts, provide a typology of the role of illness on identity and communication in health care, followed by a brief application of a case study of social identity and mental health to shed light on the function of important intergroup communication theoretical constructs existing in health care communication contexts.https://digitalcommons.chapman.edu/communication_books/1006/thumbnail.jp
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...
This article describes the ways in which group identifications and stereotypes can in-form our under...
Context:One of health care’s foremost challenges is the achievement of integra-tion and collaboratio...
A healthcare environment consists of a number of people who perform different roles, and at differin...
The social environment comprising communities, families, neighbourhoods, work teams, and various oth...
The social environment comprising communities, families, neighbourhoods, work teams, and various oth...
Hospitals involve a complex socio-technical health system, where communication failures influence th...
This chapter argues that an understanding of social identity processes is critical to understand whe...
The health of people's body and mind is powerfully conditioned by social factors that affect their s...
wenty-eight international scholars contribute 11 chapters on the key role of communication in interg...
The aim of this project was to examine which factors are important in influencing communication betw...
In this chapter, we explore intercultural health communication in doctor-patient and interprofession...
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...
This article describes the ways in which group identifications and stereotypes can in-form our under...
Context:One of health care’s foremost challenges is the achievement of integra-tion and collaboratio...
A healthcare environment consists of a number of people who perform different roles, and at differin...
The social environment comprising communities, families, neighbourhoods, work teams, and various oth...
The social environment comprising communities, families, neighbourhoods, work teams, and various oth...
Hospitals involve a complex socio-technical health system, where communication failures influence th...
This chapter argues that an understanding of social identity processes is critical to understand whe...
The health of people's body and mind is powerfully conditioned by social factors that affect their s...
wenty-eight international scholars contribute 11 chapters on the key role of communication in interg...
The aim of this project was to examine which factors are important in influencing communication betw...
In this chapter, we explore intercultural health communication in doctor-patient and interprofession...
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...