All Stories

  1. Mental health literacy and patient-mental health provider relationships among American Indian/Alaska Native/Native American people
  2. Editors’ Introduction: Understanding and Addressing Vaccine Hesitancy
  3. Analyzing the Overturn of Roe v. Wade: A Term Co-Occurrence Network Analysis of YouTube Comments
  4. Passive Methods of Monitoring Suicide Risk in AI Conversations (Preprint)
  5. Understanding Communication Apprehension in Undergraduate Nursing Students: A Qualitative Study
  6. Chinese Americans’ Information Sources on, Preferred Types of, and Satisfaction with COVID-19 Vaccination
  7. Identifying Mental Health Literacy as a Key Predictor of COVID-19 Vaccination Acceptance among American Indian/Alaska Native/Native American People
  8. Exploring communication apprehension in nursing and healthcare education: A scoping review
  9. The Role of Uncertainty and Negative Emotion in Chinese Parents’ Self-Medication of Children with Antibiotics
  10. Addressing resistance to adopting relevant health promotion recommendations with strategic health communication
  11. Qualitative evaluation of the health insurance program in Nepal: Expectations beyond limitations
  12. An Association between the Mosquito Nets and the Wealth Status: Public Health Promotion Planning and Intervention
  13. Trust in and Use of COVID-19 Information Sources Differs by Health Literacy among College Students
  14. Implications from the health belief model concerning zoonoses‐related threat perceptions held by livestock farmers in Nepal
  15. Exploring Factors Associated with Chinese-Americans’ Willingness to Receive an Additional Hypothetical Annual Dose of the COVID-19 Vaccine
  16. Trends and differences in perceptions of patient-centered communication among adults in the US
  17. Provider interacting eHealth behaviors: trends, predictors, and differences by subpopulations (Preprint)
  18. Public trust in sources and channels on judgment accuracy in food safety misinformation with the moderation effect of self‐affirmation: Evidence from the HINTS‐China database
  19. Expanding the Health Information National Trends Survey Research Program Internationally to Examine Global Health Communication Trends: Comparing Health Information Seeking Behaviors in the U.S. and Germany
  20. Addressing challenges to effectively disseminate relevant health information
  21. A nationally representative cross‐sectional survey on health information access for consumers in Japan: A protocol for the INFORM Study
  22. Global Health Communication for Immigrants and Refugees
  23. Double burden of COVID-19 knowledge deficit: low health literacy and high information avoidance
  24. Evaluation of HPV Vaccine: Same Way, Same DayTM: A Pilot Study
  25. Does perceived susceptibility and severity of health problems serve as drivers for household enrolment in health insurance? A case study from Nepal
  26. Communicative Development and Diffusion of Humanoid AI Robots for the Post-Pandemic Health Care System
  27. Does exposure of mass media associate with utilisation of ANC services? A trend analysis from Nepal demographic and health surveys
  28. Usability Evaluation of the Novel Smartphone Application, HPV Vaccine: Same Way, Same Day, Among Pediatric Residents
  29. The association between media exposure and enrollment in health insurance in Nepal: Implications for health policy
  30. Acculturation and Health Literacy Among Chinese Speakers in the USA with Limited English Proficiency
  31. The role of strategic communication to respond effectively to pandemics
  32. School Health Service Provider Perceptions on Facilitated Interactive Role-Play Around HPV Vaccine Recommendation
  33. Our Future Arrived: Diffusion of Human-Machine Communication and Transformation of the World for the Post-Pandemic Era
  34. Sneezing and Nasal Discharge as a Barrier in Communication During Adolescence
  35. The value of health communication scholarship: New directions for health communication inquiry
  36. An Analysis of Government Communication in the United States During the COVID‐19 Pandemic: Recommendations for Effective Government Health Risk Communication
  37. A Review of Qualitative Methods in Health Communication Research
  38. Educational Status of Female Youth in Nepal: A Foundation for Health and Well-being. Where Should Programmes Focus?
  39. Foreword
  40. Promoting Convergence Between Health Literacy and Health Communication
  41. Does intimate partner violence influence the utilization of maternal health services?
  42. An Examination of the Clarity of Government Health Websites Using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Clear Communication Index
  43. Environmental exposures during windows of susceptibility for breast cancer: a framework for prevention research
  44. A content analysis of HPV vaccine online continuing medical education purpose statements and learning objectives
  45. Promoting patient comprehension of relevant health information
  46. A content analysis of depression-related discourses on Sina Weibo: attribution, efficacy, and information sources
  47. Perceptions About Disseminating Health Information Among Mommy Bloggers: Quantitative Study
  48. Quality of Web-Based Educational Interventions for Clinicians on Human Papillomavirus Vaccine: Content and Usability Assessment
  49. Methods for Evaluating Online Health Information Systems
  50. Critical Incident Technique
  51. Quality of Web-Based Educational Interventions for Clinicians on Human Papillomavirus Vaccine: Content and Usability Assessment
  52. Quality of Web-Based Educational Interventions for Clinicians on Human Papillomavirus Vaccine: Content and Usability Assessment
  53. Cancer Communication Science: Intergroup Perspectives
  54. Online Information and Communication Systems to Enhance Health Outcomes Through Communication Convergence
  55. Addressing health literacy issues with mobile health applications
  56. Diffusion Theory in Integrative Approaches
  57. Perceptions About Disseminating Health Information Among Mommy Bloggers: Quantitative Study (Preprint)
  58. Designing User-Centric Patient Portals: Clinician and Patients' Uses and Gratifications
  59. Ehealth Communication
  60. Expanding the NCI Health Information National Trends Survey From the United States to China and Beyond
  61. Transdisciplinary Health Communication Research Across the Continuum of Care
  62. The Power & Perspective of Mommy Bloggers: Formative Research with Social Media Opinion Leaders about HPV Vaccination
  63. The Relevance of Health Literacy to mHealth
  64. Measuring Health Literacy Levels of a Patient Portal Using the CDC’s Clear Communication Index
  65. Communication and Effective Interprofessional Health Care Teams
  66. Applying Multiple Methods to Comprehensively Evaluate a Patient Portal’s Effectiveness to Convey Information to Patients
  67. Psychosocial Predictors of Breast Self-Examination among Female Students in Malaysia: A Study to Assess the Roles of Body Image, Self-efficacy and Perceived Barriers
  68. Engaging Patients in Primary and Specialty Care
  69. The Role of Communication and Information in Symptom Management
  70. Age-Related Use and Perceptions of eHealth in Men With Prostate Cancer: A Web-Based Survey
  71. Cancer Information Seeking Behaviors of Korean American Women: A Mixed-Methods Study Using Surveys and Focus Group Interviews
  72. The role of social support and social networks in health information–seeking behavior among Korean Americans: a qualitative study
  73. Cancer Information Seekers in China: A Preliminary Profile
  74. 26. Communication technology and health: The advent of ehealth applications
  75. Designing health information programs to promote the health and well-being of vulnerable populations
  76. Achieving the promise of digital health information systems
  77. Epilogue: Lessons Learned About Evaluating Health Communication Programs
  78. Evaluating Health Communication Programs to Enhance Health Care and Health Promotion
  79. The NLM Evaluation Lecture Series: Introduction to the Special Section on Evaluating Health Communication Programs
  80. Integrating Design Science Theory and Methods to Improve the Development and Evaluation of Health Communication Programs
  81. Isolation ofSphaerotilus-Leptothrixstrains from iron bacteria communities in Tierra del Fuego wetlands
  82. The Association between Online Health Information-seeking Behavior and Social Support in Social Networks among Korean Americans
  83. Absolute and Comparative Cancer Risk Perceptions Among Smokers in Two Cities in China
  84. Health Campaigns
  85. Emerging Issues and Future Directions of the Field of Health Communication
  86. Korean American Women’s Perceptions about Physical Examinations and Cancer Screening Services Offered in Korea: The Influences of Medical Tourism on Korean Americans
  87. Applied Communication Theory and Research
  88. Health Communication
  89. The Influences of Immigration on Health Information Seeking Behaviors Among Korean Americans and Native Koreans
  90. Artificial intelligence and immediacy: Designing health communication to personally engage consumers and providers
  91. Using design science and artificial intelligence to improve health communication: ChronologyMD case example
  92. Colorectal Cancer Screening Knowledge, Beliefs, and Practices of Korean Americans
  93. Understanding Electronic Medical Record Adoption in the United States: Communication and Sociocultural Perspectives
  94. Health communication inquiry and health outcomes
  95. Strategic use of communication to market cancer prevention and control to vulnerable populations
  96. Book Review: Lab Coats in Hollywood: Science, Scientists, and CinemaKirbyD. A. (2011). Lab Coats in Hollywood: Science, Scientists, and Cinema. Cambridge: MIT Press. 264 pp. $27.95. ISBN 978-0-262-01478-6
  97. Breast Cancer Screening Practices Among Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders
  98. Examining the Health Information–Seeking Behaviors of Korean Americans
  99. The Pervasive Role of Information in Health and Health Care: Implications for Health Communication Policy: Gary L. Kreps
  100. The Maturation of Health Communication Inquiry: Directions for Future Development and Growth
  101. Landscape and microenvironmental conditions influence over regeneration dynamics in old-growthNothofagus betuloidesSouthern Patagonian forests
  102. The Community Liaison Program: a health education pilot program to increase minority awareness of HIV and acceptance of HIV vaccine trials
  103. Translating Health Communication Research Into Practice: The Importance of Implementing and Sustaining Evidence-Based Health Communication Interventions
  104. Focus on communication in therapeutic communication.
  105. Gain Versus Loss Framing in Adherence-Promoting Communication Targeting Patients With Chronic Diseases: The Moderating Effect of Individual Time Perspective
  106. Communicating Immunization Science: The Genesis and Evolution of the National Network for Immunization Information
  107. Communication and Palliative Care: E-Health Interventions and Pain Management
  108. Development and validation of motivational messages to improve prescription medication adherence for patients with chronic health problems
  109. Methodological diversity and integration in health communication inquiry
  110. Methodological pluralism in health communication research
  111. The Use of U.S. Academic Institutions in Community Medical Disaster Recovery
  112. Can Public Schools Serve as Communication Networks for Community Disaster Medical Preparedness and Recovery? A Review
  113. Cancer Information Seeking and Awareness of Cancer Information Sources among Korean Americans
  114. From Diagnosis to Death: A Case Study of Coping With Breast Cancer as Seen Through Online Discussion Group Messages
  115. The Information Revolution and the Changing Face of Health Communication in Modern Society
  116. Consumers’ Perceptions About and Use of the Internet for Personal Health Records and Health Information Exchange: Analysis of the 2007 Health Information National Trends Survey
  117. Can patient–provider interaction increase the effectiveness of medical treatment or even substitute it?—An exploration on why and how to study the specific effect of the provider
  118. “Practicing medicine”: Patient perceptions of physician communication and the process of prescription
  119. Special Issue
Editorial Review Board
  120. Editors' Introduction, Ehealth and Health Promotion
  121. Editors' Introduction, Communication Education and Health Promotion
  122. Special Editorial Board
  123. Editors' Introduction: Ehealth and the Delivery of Health Care
  124. New directions in eHealth communication: Opportunities and challenges
  125. eHealth communication and behavior change: promise and performance
  126. Influenza Immunization: Synthesizing and Communicating the Evidence
  127. Health Communication
  128. Patient Perceptions of Physician Communication Regarding Prescription Medications Interview
  129. Editors' Introduction: New Directions in Health Communication, Marketing, and Media
  130. Applying Weick's model of organizing to health care and health promotion: Highlighting the central role of health communication
  131. Surveying the field of health communication.
  132. Transdisciplinary Science: The Nexus Between Communication and Public Health
  133. Qualitative Inquiry and the Future of Health Communication Research
  134. Strategic health communication across the continuum of breast cancer care in limited-resource countries
  135. Guideline implementation for breast healthcare in low- and middle-income countries
  136. Strategic Use of Communication to Market Cancer Prevention and Control to Vulnerable Populations
  137. Meeting the health literacy needs of immigrant populations
  138. Online cancer communication: Meeting the literacy, cultural and linguistic needs of diverse audiences
  139. The power of community-based health communication interventions to promote cancer prevention and control for at-risk populations
  140. Disseminating Findings from a Drug Class Review: Using Best Practices to Inform Prescription of Antiepileptic Drugs for Bipolar Disorder
  141. Healthcare Utilization Among Veterans Undergoing Chemotherapy
  142. Future directions for the Cancer Information Service and cancer education
  143. The NCI Digital Divide Pilot Projects: Implications for cancer education
  144. Cancer survivors information seeking behaviors: A comparison of survivors who do and do not seek information about cancer
  145. Screening practices in cancer survivors
  146. Health Behaviors in Cancer Survivors
  147. Communication and Racial Inequities in Health Care
  148. The Health Information National Trends Survey: Research From the Baseline
  149. Trust and Sources of Health Information
  150. Responding to Terrorism: Translating Communication Research into Practice
  151. The CIS Model for Collaborative Research in Health Communications: A Brief Retrospective From the Current Generation of Research
  152. Creating a Framework for Online Cancer Services Research to Facilitate Timely and Interdisciplinary Applications
  153. Responding to Terrorism: Translating Communication Research into Practice
  154. Bridging the Digital Divide: Reaching Vulnerable Populations
  155. The Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS): Development, Design, and Dissemination
  156. The Internet as a Vehicle to Communicate Health Information During a Public Health Emergency: A Survey Analysis Involving the Anthrax Scare of 2001
  157. Forty Years of Diffusion of Innovations: Utility and Value in Public Health
  158. Consumer/provider communication research: directions for development
  159. The Impact of Communication on Cancer Risk, Incidence, Morbidity, Mortality, and Quality of Life
  160. Trends and Directions in Health Communication Research
  161. Trends and Directions in Health Communication Research
  162. Trends and Directions in Health Communication Research
  163. E-health: Technology-mediated Health Communication
  164. The Advent of E-Health. How Interactive Media Are Transforming Health Communication
  165. The Advent of E-Health. How Interactive Media Are Transforming Health Communication
  166. The Advent of E-Health. How Interactive Media Are Transforming Health Communication
  167. Rethinking Communication in the E-health Era
  168. Cancer communications research and health outcomes: Review and challenge
  169. Advancing communication as a science: Research opportunities from the federal sector
  170. Foreword
  171. Consumer/Provider Communication Research: A Personal Plea to Address Issues of Ecological Validity, Relational Development, Message Diversity and Situational Constraints
  172. The Evolution and Advancement of Health Communication Inquiry
  173. Testing a Relational Model for Health Communication Competence among Caregivers for Individuals with Alzheimer's Disease
  174. Guest Editorial
  175. Book Review
  176. Promoting a Consumer Orientation to Health Care and Health Promotion
  177. Abstracts & Reviews : Effective Communication in Multicultural Health Care Settings by Gary L. Kreps & Elizabeth N. Kunimoto. 1994. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Paper: $16.95, ISBN 0-8039-4714-3, x+ 146 pages, 5 tables, 7 fig ures. Communicating Effectivel...
  178. Doctors Talking With Patients/Patients Talking With Doctors: Improving Communication in Medical Visits (Book)
  179. The Influences of Human Communication on Health Outcomes
  180. A rose by any other name: The vitality of group communication research
  181. Effective Communication in Multicultural Health Care Settings
  182. A matter of life and death: Health seeking behaviors of Guatemalan refugees in South Florida
  183. Cross-cultural caring: A handbook for health professionals in Western Canada
  184. Introduction
  185. Book review of Communicating Social Support
  186. Applied communication research: Scholarship that can make a difference
  187. Balancing the Human Equation:
  188. Stories as Repositories of Organizational Intelligence: Implications for Organizational Development
  189. A therapeutic model of organizational communication consultation: Application of interpretive field methods
  190. Setting the Agenda for Health Communication Research and Development: Scholarship That Can Make a Difference
  191. Relational communication in health care
  192. Book Reviews : Organizational Communication. Gary L. Kreps. White Plains, NY: Longman, Inc., 1986, 339 pages
  193. Using the case method in organizational communication education: Developing students’ insight, knowledge, and creativity through experience‐based learning and systematic debriefing
  194. A Field Experimental Test and Revaluation of Weick's Model of Organizing
  195. Change in Crisis-Relevant Organizations
  196. Health Communication
  197. Chapter 20 Evaluating Health Communication Interventions (Gary L. Kreps, George Mason University)
  198. Translating Health Communication Research into Practice
  199. Health Communication Theories
  200. Teaching Students to Be Competent Opinion Leaders via LEAD
  201. Chapter 16 Strategic Communication for Health Advocacy and Social Change (Gary L. Kreps, George Mason University)
  202. Commentary: Communication and Women's Health
  203. Consumer/Provider Communication Research: A Personal Plea to Address Issues of Ecological Validity, Relational Development, Message Diversity, and Situational Constraints
  204. Chapter 13 Community Participatory Design of Health Communication Interventions (Linda Neuhauser, University of California, Berkeley Gary L. Kreps, George Mason University S. Leonard Syme, University of California, Berkeley)