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EbookBell Team
5.0
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ISBN 13: 9780230251960
Author: R Harris
This book explore assumptions underpinning contemporary health policy discourses that emphasize personal responsibility for health, consider how they attach to changing information technologies, and discuss their influence on emerging forms of health 'work'.
1 Health(y) Citizenship: Technology, Work and Narratives of Responsibility
Part I
2 In Sickness and in Health: Public and Private Responsibility for Health Care from Bismarck to Obam
3 Power to the Patient? A Critical Examination of Patient Empowerment Discourses
Part II
4 Lay Knowledge: The Missing Middle of the Expertise Debates
5 The Rhetorical Work of Informed Choice in Midwifery: Situated Knowledges and the Negotiation of He
6 Empowerment, Compliance and the Ethical Subject in Dietetic Work
7 Disorder Construction as Lay Work: Examining the Relationship Between Sleep Paralysis Construction
Part III
8 Facilitating Patients’ Hope Work Through Relationship: A Critique of the Discourse of Autonomy
9 The Work of Clinical Communication in Cancer Care
10 Working for the Cure: Challenging Pink Ribbon Activism
Part IV
11 Impatient on the Net: Exploring the Genres of Internet Use for Health
12 Sourcing the Crowd for Health Experiences: Letting the People Speak or Obliging Voice Through Cho
13 Working (IT) Out Together: Engaging the Community in E-Health Developments for Obesity Management
14 Working to be Healthy: Empowering Consumers or Citizens?
Tags: R Harris, Configuring, Consumers