Читать книгу Information Practices and Knowledge in Health - Группа авторов - Страница 2

Оглавление

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright

Introduction

1 Open Access as a Regulation of Scientific Information in Health 1.1. Introduction 1.2. The political anchoring of Open Access in the field of Health 1.3. Gold Open Access or the “Author-Pays” principle 1.4. Predatory journals: the “price” of change 1.5. The place and weight of funding agencies in the OA environment 1.6. Plan S, a “radicalization”12 of Open Access in Health? 1.7. Scientific information in Health: a world of no journals? 1.8. Conclusion 1.9. References

2 Knowledge Organization and Studies of Information Practices: Contribution to the Characterization of Health Information 2.1. Introduction 2.2. Theoretical framework 2.3. Discourse collection and corpus analysis: approaches to health information from the “field” 2.4. Conclusion: towards a characterization of health information 2.5. References

3 Health Literacy in Complex Digital Information Environments 3.1. Introduction 3.2. Analyzing health information on the Internet: the need for a mixed and comprehensive approach 3.3. Key findings and issues in digital health literacy 3.4. Health, information and digital technology: a logic in line with transliteracy 3.5. Conclusion 3.6. References

4 The Essential Role of Health Information Literacy in Seniors’ Healthcare Communication 4.1. Introduction 4.2. Health information behavior of older adults 4.3. Literacies related to health 4.4. Literacies and older age 4.5. Health literacy and healthcare communication 4.6. Health information literacy and health information behavior 4.7. Measuring health information literacy 4.8. Communication between seniors and healthcare professionals 4.9. Health information literacy and healthcare communication 4.10. Conclusions 4.11. Appendix 1: standard regression results 4.12. References

5 Categorization of Audiences and Hierarchization of Actors in the Journalistic Narrative on HIV/AIDS Prevention. What Implications for Prevention Information? 5.1. Introduction 5.2. Methodology 5.3. Routinized journalistic treatment of HIV/AIDS prevention 5.4. Categorizing users: between stigmatization and the need for prevention 5.5. From a categorization of the public based on membership in a risk group to a focus on practices 5.6. Media coverage of biomedical prevention actors 5.7. Conclusion 5.8. References

10  6 Historical Approach to Health Information in Anti-alcohol Prevention: The Case of the American National Prohibition Campaign (1910–1919) 6.1. Introduction 6.2. Health information in the prohibitionist campaign 6.3. Communicating health information 6.4. Information and influence 6.5. Conclusion 6.6. References

11  7 Professional Uses of Specialized Information in Ophthalmology. Interview with Pascal Four, Doctor of Ophthalmology 7.1. Training and areas of intervention in ophthalmology 7.2. Information useful in the context of medical practice 7.3. Access to knowledge and information sources 7.4. Time spent searching for information, criteria for evaluating information 7.5. Information exchanged with patients 7.6. Knowledge organization and structuring of the document base 7.7. Appendix: interview grid

12  8 Organization of Medical Knowledge: Documentation Techniques Applied to a Macro-domain Underpinned by Socio-political Issues 8.1. Introduction 8.2. Documentation and Library and Information Sciences and the organization of knowledge 8.3. Methodology 8.4. Presentation of the corpus of publications between 1960 and 2019 8.5. Medical knowledge organization systems 8.6. New challenges for indexing and information retrieval 8.7. Social, cultural, political and economic issues 8.8. Discussion 8.9. Conclusion 8.10. References 8.11. Appendix 1: the corpus of journal articles and conference proceedings 8.12. Appendix 2: MKOS corpus

13  List of Authors

14  Index

15  End User License Agreement

Guide

Cover

Table of Contents

Title Page

Copyright

Introduction

Begin Reading

List of Authors

Index

End User License Agreement

List of Illustrations

1 Chapter 6Figures 6.1 and 6.2. Pamphlet “Beer a food?” (Safety First) and Pamphlet 22 (STF...Figure 6.3. Modalities of evidence for health informationFigure 6.4. Distribution of visual representations by typeFigures 6.5 and 6.6. Pamphlet 9 (STF) and Pamphlet 2 (STF)Figure 6.7. Thematic classification of pamphlets by effect

List of Tables

1 Chapter 4Table 4.1. Socio-demographic background of the 281 respondentsTable 4.2. Responses to statements on communication in a healthcare context (ada...

2 Chapter 6Table 6.1. Summary table of health themesTable 6.2. Identification of the Federation’s health information competenciesTable 6.3. The rhetoric of error

Pages

v

iii

iv

xi

xii

xiii

xiv

xv

xvi

10  xvii

11  xviii

12  xix

13  xx

14  xxi

15  xxii

16  1

17  2

18  3

19  4

20  5

21  6

22  7

23  8

24  9

25  10

26  11

27  12

28  13

29  14

30  15

31  16

32  17

33  18

34  19

35  20

36  21

37  22

38  23

39  24

40  25

41  26

42  27

43  28

44  29

45  30

46  31

47  32

48  33

49  34

50  35

51  36

52  37

53  38

54  39

55  40

56  41

57  42

58  43

59  44

60  45

61  46

62  47

63  48

64  49

65  50

66  51

67 52

68  53

69  54

70  55

71  56

72  57

73  58

74  59

75  60

76  61

77  62

78  63

79  64

80  65

81  66

82  67

83  68

84  69

85  71

86  72

87  73

88  74

89  75

90  76

91  77

92  78

93  79

94  80

95 81

96  82

97 83

98  84

99  85

100  86

101  87

102  88

103  89

104  90

105  91

106  92

107  93

108  94

109  95

110  97

111  98

112  99

113  100

114  101

115  102

116  103

117  104

118  105

119  106

120  107

121  108

122  109

123  110

124  111

125  112

126  113

127  114

128  115

129  117

130  118

131  119

132  120

133  121

134  122

135  123

136  124

137  125

138  126

139  127

140  128

141  129

142  130

143  131

144  132

145  133

146  134

147  135

148  136

149  137

150  138

151  139

152  140

153  141

154  142

155  143

156  144

157  145

158  146

159  147

160  148

161  149

162  150

163  151

164  152

165  153

166  154

167  155

168 156

169  157

170  158

171  159

172 160

173  161

174  162

175  163

176  164

177 165

178  167

179  168

180  169

181  170

182  171

183  172

184  173

185  174

186  175

187  176

188  177

189  178

190  179

191  180

192  181

193  182

194  183

195  184

196  185

197  186

198  187

199  188

200  189

201  190

202  191

203  192

204  193

205  194

206  195

207  196

208  197

209  198

210  199

211  200

212  201

213  202

214  203

215  204

216  205

217  206

218  207

219  208

220  209

221 210

222  211

223  212

224  213

Information Practices and Knowledge in Health

Подняться наверх