Communicating Health
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Transcript Communicating Health
Communicating Health
COMT 492/592
Health communication
Symbolic processes by which
people, individually and
collectively understand, shape
and accommodate to health and
illness.
Health Communication
Involves a wide range of messages
pertaining to health maintenance,
health promotion, disease
prevention, treatment.
The messages vary with respect to:
Situations
Structures
Roles
Relationships
Identities
Goals
Social influence
Basic definitions
Healthy
Unhealthy
We make sense of symbols with
mixed messages:
Meanings vary depending on who
you talk to, what media you see,
hear or read, what you think about
when you go to the gym or a
restaurant, listen to a sick relative,
etc.
Theorizing
We are constantly theorizing –
searching for explanations –
from the stories we tell and hear
about everyday health practices.
Narrative perspective
Stories are a way of learning
How we negotiate, maintain and
rationalize healthy and unhealthy
behaviors
Narrating Life
Ways of talking about problems
determine amount of power a
person has
Victim vs. survivor
Public telling gives voice to
storyteller
Representing Health
“Health”
Eradication or significant decrease in
diseases globally
Ideals of providing adequate shelter,
food, and medical care for all citizens
“Disease”
Diagnosis, naming the problem, has
symbolic importance to the individual
E.g., concept of “date rape” empowered
many women to go public
E.g., labeling someone as “sick” can
disempower them too
Medicalization
Diagnosis can lead to aggressive
measures
E.g., menopause as “estrogendeficiency” called for synthetic hormone
use that brought with it serious
complications (breast cancer).
Pathologizing natural processes
E.g., homosexuality was listed as a
diagnostic category in the APA manual
until 1973.
Health beyond medicine
Become an active participant
Interact with peers around health
Individual health needs may go beyond
current organizational structures
Public arena discussions form basis
of policy
Conduct own health communication
assessment
Allows public scrutiny
Public campaigns can move health
beyond medicine
Public moral argument
Overview
Identities
Embedded in and imposed on our ideas
of how the world is, how we lives our
lives, including health.
Influenced by several communicative
levels.
Stories
Told to frame, understand, confront,
manage and change identities
Important to address constraints on
voice, stigma, stereotypes and
suppression