Rhetoric of health and medicine

The rhetoric of health and medicine (or medical rhetoric) is an academic discipline concerning language and symbols in health and medicine.[1] Rhetoric most commonly refers to the persuasive element in human interactions and is often best studied in the specific situations in which it occurs.[2] As a subfield of rhetoric, medical rhetoric specifically analyzes and evaluates the structure, delivery, and intention of communications messages in medicine- and health-related contexts. Primary topics of focus includes patient-physician communication, health literacy, language that constructs disease knowledge, and pharmaceutical advertising (including both direct-to-consumer and direct-to-physician advertising). The general research areas are described below. Medical rhetoric is a more focused subfield of the rhetoric of science.

Practitioners from the medical rhetoric field hail from a variety of disciplines, including English studies, communication studies, and health humanities. Through methods such as content analysis, survey methodology, and usability testing, researchers in this sphere recognize the importance of communication to successful healthcare.[3]

Several communication journals, including Communication Design Quarterly,[4] Journal of Business and Technical Communication,[5] Technical Communication Quarterly,[6] and Present Tense,[7] have published special issues on themes related to medical rhetoric. The majority of research in the field is indexed in the academic database EBSCO Communication & Mass Media Complete.[8] In 2013, scholars in the field also began a biennial symposium, Discourses of Health and Medicine.[9]

  1. ^ Segal, Judy Z. Health and the Rhetoric of Medicine. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 2005. Print.
  2. ^ Derkatch, Colleen and Judy Segal (2005). "Realms of Rhetoric in Health and Medicine". University of Toronto Medical Journal.
  3. ^ Mirel, Barbara, Ellen Barton, and Mark Ackerman. "Researching Telemedicine: Capturing Complex Clinical Interactions with a Simple Interface Design." Technical Communication Quarterly 17.3 (2008): 358-378.
  4. ^ https://sigdoc.acm.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/CDQ-3.4-August-2015.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  5. ^ Barton, Ellen. “Introduction to the Special Issue: The Discourses of Medicine.” Journal of Business and Technical Communication 19.3 (2005): 245-248.
  6. ^ Koerber, Amy, and Brian Still. “Guest Editor’s Introduction: Online Health Communication.” Technical Communication Quarterly 17.3 (2008): 259-263.
  7. ^ Angeli, Elizabeth L., et al. “Our First Special Issue: Medical, Gender, and Body Rhetorics.Present Tense: A Journal of Rhetoric in Society 2.2 (2012). Web.
  8. ^ EBSCO Communication & Mass Media Complete
  9. ^ Meloncon, Lisa. "Discourses of Health and Medicine". Discourses of Health and Medicine: Looking Forward 2015.

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