This article examines how manufacturers marketed and advertised television’s uses and ben-efits to a professional audience of hospital administrators and nurses. The article draws on a variety of archival materials, including advertisements from medical trade journals such as Modern Hospital and the American Journal of Nursing and analyses of healthcare architec-ture. Extending substantial theoretical work on the relationship between technology and gendered labor forms, it demonstrates that television’s entrance into the nondomestic, institu-tional context of the hospital was contingent upon received notions about nurses ’ labor and patient comfort. Recognizing the possibilities of television as a new communication medium, the most signific...
Impressive in scope, the conference“Media Images and Screen Representations of Nurses” incorporated ...
Media portrayals of the nursing profession have been studied extensively, and found to be consistent...
Aims: To describe the results of a study of images of men in nursing on television. Background: Prev...
As healthcare related issues continue to rise, an unexplored problem persists beyond the scope of cu...
This thematic issue of VIEW brings together articles that show how television has been an instrument...
This article examines the representation of care and cure on digital terrestrial television in Italy...
This article maps the terrain of contemporary UK medical television, paying particular attention to ...
This article explores the contribution of television programmes to shaping the doctor-patient relat...
Television Entertainment and the US Health-Care Debate Some experts on the media say that entertainm...
Despite the growing ubiquity of televisions in hospital wards in the UK and America from the 1950s, ...
Television is a part of the lives of many people. According to Larry Gross and George Gerbner's cult...
Aims: To explore nursing students' perceptions of how their profession is portrayed on medical telev...
A television hostess provides the first wave of service excellence by helping patients operate their...
The image of the nurse is ubiquitous, both in life and in popular media. One of the earliest instanc...
<p>This article concerns health programs that the Danish public service broadcaster DR produced from...
Impressive in scope, the conference“Media Images and Screen Representations of Nurses” incorporated ...
Media portrayals of the nursing profession have been studied extensively, and found to be consistent...
Aims: To describe the results of a study of images of men in nursing on television. Background: Prev...
As healthcare related issues continue to rise, an unexplored problem persists beyond the scope of cu...
This thematic issue of VIEW brings together articles that show how television has been an instrument...
This article examines the representation of care and cure on digital terrestrial television in Italy...
This article maps the terrain of contemporary UK medical television, paying particular attention to ...
This article explores the contribution of television programmes to shaping the doctor-patient relat...
Television Entertainment and the US Health-Care Debate Some experts on the media say that entertainm...
Despite the growing ubiquity of televisions in hospital wards in the UK and America from the 1950s, ...
Television is a part of the lives of many people. According to Larry Gross and George Gerbner's cult...
Aims: To explore nursing students' perceptions of how their profession is portrayed on medical telev...
A television hostess provides the first wave of service excellence by helping patients operate their...
The image of the nurse is ubiquitous, both in life and in popular media. One of the earliest instanc...
<p>This article concerns health programs that the Danish public service broadcaster DR produced from...
Impressive in scope, the conference“Media Images and Screen Representations of Nurses” incorporated ...
Media portrayals of the nursing profession have been studied extensively, and found to be consistent...
Aims: To describe the results of a study of images of men in nursing on television. Background: Prev...