Confidence and Legitimacy in Health Information and Communication.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781119549727
- 610.696
- R118.2 .C664 2018
Cover -- Half-Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- References -- 1. Information Sources on Childhood Immunization -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. Methodology -- 1.3. Vaccination: a proven trust -- 1.3.1. Loss of trust in the vaccination act -- 1.3.2. The vaccination obligation -- 1.4. Health and legitimacy information retrieval: an ambivalent stance -- 1.4.1. Health information research practices -- 1.4.2. Criteria for the legitimacy of online medical information -- 1.5. Parents' knowledge of vaccination -- 1.5.1. Lack of knowledge and limited use of the available information -- 1.5.2. Few parents seek information on vaccination -- 1.6. The opinion of the health professional: a forced trust? -- 1.6.1. A discourse that can change the perception of the vaccination act -- 1.6.2. Maintained trust for health professionals -- 1.7. Conclusion -- 1.8. References -- 2. Web 2.0, Parenting and Informational Habitus -- 2.1. Vaccine hesitancy: a manifestation of parental approach -- 2.2. Methodology -- 2.3. Results -- 2.3.1. Diversified information practices -- 2.3.2. The Internet and the importance of choice -- 2.3.3. Mechanisms for determining information credibility -- 2.4. Information reflexivity -- 2.5. Conclusion -- 2.6. References -- 3. Trust, Information Sources and the Impact on Decision-Making: The Example of Vaccination -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Vaccination: a complex decision influenced by trust -- 3.3. Vaccine hesitancy and trust toward information -- 3.3.1. Quebec parents' trust in the information provided about their children's vaccination -- 3.4. Media, information and vaccine hesitancy -- 3.4.1. Media and media controversies surrounding vaccination -- 3.4.2. Media controversy surrounding human papillomavirus vaccination in Quebec.
3.4.3. Vaccination information research: impact on vaccine decision-making -- 3.5. Challenges and issues of public health communication to increase vaccine coverage -- 3.6. Conclusion -- 3.7. References -- 4. Info-Communication Practices of Autistic Children's Parents on the Internet: Trust Issues and Legitimacy -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Search for health information on the Internet: questioning the medical authority? -- 4.3. Trust and legitimacy: at the heart of the patient's "actorization" -- 4.4. The trust crisis concerning autism -- 4.5. Methodological elements -- 4.6. Sample presentation and statistical limits -- 4.7. The trust crisis in autism: empirical evidence -- 4.8. Habits in information retrieval on autism -- 4.9. Parents' motivations to go on the Internet and compensation research because of a lack of medical info-communication -- 4.10. Conclusion: overview and perspectives -- 4.11. References -- 5. Trust and Information Behavior of French Air Force Flight Nurses -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. Information behavior and situation awareness -- 5.3. Group of actors and study methodology -- 5.4. Analysis of the empirical study's results -- 5.4.1. Building trusting relationships -- 5.4.2. Trust and roles/structure as information sources -- 5.4.3. Trust and communication -- 5.4.4. Trust and skills/knowledge/experience -- 5.4.5. Trust and control -- 5.5. Discussion and conclusion -- 5.6. References -- 6. Online Info-Communication Practices in the Face of a Crisis of Trust in Breast Cancer Prevention -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Breast cancer prevention: a strategic uncertainty? -- 6.2.1. Public health communication: toward a culture of prevention? -- 6.2.2. Breast cancer preventions in question: measures and actors -- 6.3. Online info-communication practices of the population concerned by breast cancer prevention.
6.3.1. Methodological choices for the analysis of an online exchange area -- 6.3.2. Two trust measures: between judgment and promises -- 6.4. Discussion and conclusion -- 6.5. References -- 7. Trust between Constraints and Limitations of Information Behaviors Among Public Health Policy Actors: The Case of Music Therapy -- 7.1. Introduction -- 7.2. Context of emergence of the question of trust: the case of music therapy -- 7.3. Research field -- 7.4. Devices to observe -- 7.5. Methodology -- 7.6. Trust apprehended through the digital document -- 7.7. Trust apprehended via institutional sites -- 7.8. Trust apprehended through digital devices -- 7.9. Conclusion -- 7.10. Annex -- 7.10.1. Parliamentary documents -- 7.10.2. Documents distributed by the HAS -- 7.10.3. Attribution documents created using screenshots from institutional website pages via the following links -- 7.11. References -- 8. Hospital Trust and Legitimacy: Internal Medicine in the French Health Care System -- 8.1. Introduction -- 8.2. The interface-actor as a transversal integrator -- 8.2.1. Presentation of the interface-actor -- 8.2.2. Interface-actor missions -- 8.3. Internal medicine at the interface of hospital services -- 8.3.1. Internal medicine and the role of the internist -- 8.3.2. Readability and notoriety of internal medicine -- 8.3.3. Evolution of internal medicine -- 8.4. Conclusion -- 8.5. References -- 9. From Health Actors' Information Communication Issues in the Workplace to Obstacles when Establishing a Relationship of Trust -- 9.1. Introduction -- 9.2. Building the company's legitimacy in occupational health safety -- 9.2.1. The employer's obligations -- 9.2.2. Biopolitical perspective and company's legitimacy -- 9.2.3. Health actors: health information and communication producers within the company -- 9.3. Info-communication issues of health actors within the company.
9.3.1. Between distance and alignment regarding institutional communication -- 9.3.2. The lack of visibility and burden of health actors -- 9.4. The company and its communication policies: obstacles to establishing a relationship of trust -- 9.4.1. Primacy of control logic and employee concealment strategies -- 9.4.2. The difficulty of talking for employees -- 9.5. Conclusion -- 9.6. References -- 10. Connected Health: Between Common Aspirations and Specific Interests -- 10.1. Introduction: connected health, a notion in search of a referent -- 10.2. Multiple paths of a historical disempowerment of health -- 10.3. New economic configurations of connected health -- 10.4. Conclusion: trust, an ever-new challenge -- 10.5. References -- Data sources -- 11. Expressions of Trust in the Home-Based Care Relationship and Areas of Legitimacy in the Context of Digital Media -- 11.1. Introduction -- 11.2. Care: a relationship between actors -- 11.2.1. Structure of treatment: logics forged concerning epistemological foundations between cure and care -- 11.2.2. Interactional dimensions and functions of the care relationship -- 11.3. Dynamic of building trust in the home-based care relationship -- 11.3.1. Trust in the doctor-patient relationship: a notion rooted in privacy -- 11.3.2. Trust in the caregiver-patient relationship: a pattern shaped by esteem -- 11.3.3. Trust in the helping-patient relationship: a domestic commitment of proximity -- 11.4. Digital mediatization of the relationship based on the care device -- 11.4.1. Singularity of media coverage of the relationship with ICT -- 11.4.2. Singularity of media coverage of care with ICT -- 11.4.3. Trust climate in the context of digital media -- 11.5. Forecast and conclusion -- 11.6. References.
12. The Electronic Medical Record: Standardization Issues and Personalization of Information for Health Professionals -- 12.1. Introduction to EMRs -- 12.2. Literature review -- 12.3. Exploratory empirical study -- 12.3.1. Study context -- 12.3.2. Methodology -- 12.4. Discussion and conclusion -- 12.5. References -- Postface -- List of Authors -- Index -- Other titles from iSTE in Health Engineering and Society -- EULA.
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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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