ABSTRACT

This volume provides an essential roster of primary research methods as they apply to health communication inquiry. Editor Bryan B. Whaley brings together key health communication researchers to write about their primary methodological areas. Their chapters offer guidance and insights for a variety of approaches to answering research questions. The methods included here cover:

  • Exploration and Description: interview/focus groups, case study, ethnography, and surveys;
  • Examining Messages and Interpersonal Exchanges: narrative analysis, conversational analysis, analyzing physician-patient interactions, social network analysis, and content analysis;
  • Causal Explication: experimental research, meta-analysis, and meta-synthesis; and
  • Cultural, Population, and Critical Concerns: rhetorical methods and criticism, and methodological issues when investigating stigmatized populations, and groups with health disparities.

Chapters cite or use examples from allied health areas -- nursing, public health, sociology, medicine -- to demonstrate the breadth of health communication studies.

This work highlights the importance of methodology in health communication research in multiple contexts. Developed to provide a fundamental reference for investigating health communication, this volume will serve as an invaluable tool for researchers and students across the social science and health disciplines.

part |17 pages

Method Matters

part |78 pages

Exploration and Description

part |116 pages

Examining Messages and Interpersonal Exchanges

chapter |20 pages

Narrative Inquiry

Attitude, Acts, Artifacts, and Analysis

chapter |22 pages

Conversation Analysis

Understanding the Structure of Health Talk

chapter |21 pages

It's Not What You Know . . .

Social Network Analysis and Health Communication

part |63 pages

Causal Explication

chapter |22 pages

Building Cumulative Knowledge in Health Communication

The Application of Meta-Analytic Methods

chapter |22 pages

Meta-Synthesis

The Utility of Synthesizing Qualitative Health Communication Research

part |59 pages

Cultural, Population, and Critical Concerns