Description

Book Synopsis
Dosage: A Guiding Principle for Health Communicators uses dosage as a metaphor to help all healthcare professionals apply basic communication principles to their work. After a general overview of communication and its paramount importance in the health care setting, J. David Johnson, a professor of communications and former media research analyst for the U.S. Information Agency and author of five previous books, outlines the best practices forInterpersonal communication in health care relationships, including that between physician and patient. He answers questions such as How Much Do I Reveal and When?;Interprofessional teams, including teamwork, interdependence, stress and burnout, and communication in decision-making;Mass Media, including searching for information and gaps in knowledge;Knowledge diffusion and dissemination;Change in communication, including social media;Health information technology and how to handle the flood of communications we receive today. Johnson effectivel

Trade Review
Dosage is an important reframing of how we think about the challenges of communicating about health. Johnson thoughtfully uses the metaphor of pharmacological dose and demonstrates its applicability across a range of contexts, from the doctor breaking bad news to a patient, to distributed teams seeking to coordinate activity, to health promotion campaigns for behavior change. Health communicators -- whether marketing professionals, nurses and social workers, marketing practitioners, or social media bloggers -- can easily pick up lessons here from a wealth of scholarship about message development, channel selection, timing and frequency, and how to avoid the negative consequences of too much communication about a health issue. Here is a top-flight scholar offering us a new way to re-vision the challenges of professional communication. -- James W. Dearing, Michigan State University
This textbook is long overdue and unprecedented in the social scientific literature. The question of how much is enough is seldom addressed in research and Johnson's book takes a critical and empirically-based examination of this question in health communication. -- Thomas Feeley, Professor and Chair of Communication, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
Citing a dearth of information available to the physician for guidance in imparting medical information to patients, Johnson presents the "dosage metaphor." With a focus on amount, frequency, sequencing, delivery system, interaction with other agents, and contraindications he provides answers to fundamental problems that all health communicators face. There are nine chapters: introduction and overview; definition and the use of metaphor; interpersonal communication; inter-professional teams; mass media; diffusion and dissemination; change; health information technology; and final analysis. Inter alia, he describes communication campaigns, new health information technologies, social media, the wisdom of crowds, and discusses the policy issues raised by the dosage metaphor. This concise and interesting book is for doctors, nurses, social workers, and marketers. There are figures, tables boxes, and a bibliography. * Book News, Inc. *

Dosage

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A Paperback by J. David Johnson

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    View other formats and editions of Dosage by J. David Johnson

    Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
    Publication Date: 1/12/2013 12:09:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9781442221253, 978-1442221253
    ISBN10: 1442221259

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Dosage: A Guiding Principle for Health Communicators uses dosage as a metaphor to help all healthcare professionals apply basic communication principles to their work. After a general overview of communication and its paramount importance in the health care setting, J. David Johnson, a professor of communications and former media research analyst for the U.S. Information Agency and author of five previous books, outlines the best practices forInterpersonal communication in health care relationships, including that between physician and patient. He answers questions such as How Much Do I Reveal and When?;Interprofessional teams, including teamwork, interdependence, stress and burnout, and communication in decision-making;Mass Media, including searching for information and gaps in knowledge;Knowledge diffusion and dissemination;Change in communication, including social media;Health information technology and how to handle the flood of communications we receive today. Johnson effectivel

    Trade Review
    Dosage is an important reframing of how we think about the challenges of communicating about health. Johnson thoughtfully uses the metaphor of pharmacological dose and demonstrates its applicability across a range of contexts, from the doctor breaking bad news to a patient, to distributed teams seeking to coordinate activity, to health promotion campaigns for behavior change. Health communicators -- whether marketing professionals, nurses and social workers, marketing practitioners, or social media bloggers -- can easily pick up lessons here from a wealth of scholarship about message development, channel selection, timing and frequency, and how to avoid the negative consequences of too much communication about a health issue. Here is a top-flight scholar offering us a new way to re-vision the challenges of professional communication. -- James W. Dearing, Michigan State University
    This textbook is long overdue and unprecedented in the social scientific literature. The question of how much is enough is seldom addressed in research and Johnson's book takes a critical and empirically-based examination of this question in health communication. -- Thomas Feeley, Professor and Chair of Communication, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
    Citing a dearth of information available to the physician for guidance in imparting medical information to patients, Johnson presents the "dosage metaphor." With a focus on amount, frequency, sequencing, delivery system, interaction with other agents, and contraindications he provides answers to fundamental problems that all health communicators face. There are nine chapters: introduction and overview; definition and the use of metaphor; interpersonal communication; inter-professional teams; mass media; diffusion and dissemination; change; health information technology; and final analysis. Inter alia, he describes communication campaigns, new health information technologies, social media, the wisdom of crowds, and discusses the policy issues raised by the dosage metaphor. This concise and interesting book is for doctors, nurses, social workers, and marketers. There are figures, tables boxes, and a bibliography. * Book News, Inc. *

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