ABSTRACT

Language, Health and Culture brings together contributions by linguistic scholars working in the area of health communication in Asia—in particular, in Hong Kong, Mainland China, Singapore, Japan and Taiwan.

Olga Zayts-Spence and Susan M. Bridges, along with the contributors, draw on a diverse range of authentic data from different (primary, secondary, digital) healthcare contexts across Asia. The contributions probe empirical analyses and meta-reflections on the empirical, epistemological and theoretical foundations of doing research on language and health communication in Asia. While many of the medical and technological advances originate from the ‘non-English-dominant’/‘peripheral’ contexts, when it comes to health communication, there is a strong tendency to downplay and marginalize the scope and the impact of the ripe research tradition in these contexts. The contributions to the edited volume problematize the hegemony of dominant (Anglocentric) traditions in health communication research by highlighting culture- and context-specific ways of interpreting different health realities through linguistic lenses.

chapter 1|19 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|21 pages

Resisting responsibility for decision-making during medical consultation

A conversation analytic study in Singapore

chapter 3|19 pages

How to make an unacceptable choice for a patient acceptable

An examination of the decision-making process in Japanese medical settings

chapter 4|22 pages

Resistance to treatment recommendations

An interactional resource to increase information exchange and promote shared decision-making in medical encounters

chapter 6|18 pages

Communicating health knowledges across clinic and community

The case of sex characteristics in plurilingual Hong Kong

chapter 7|19 pages

The “mad consultant dealing with mad people”

A discursive historical approach to tensions regarding mental health stigma in Hong Kong

chapter 9|19 pages

Improving intergenerational communication

A case study of interactions between medical students and senior citizens in a Japanese community

chapter 10|20 pages

Conclusion

Advancing healthcare communication research in ‘Global Peripheries’