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  • Communicating COVID-19 = media, trust, and public engagement /
  • Record Type: Electronic resources : Monograph/item
    Title/Author: Communicating COVID-19/ edited by Monique Lewis, Eliza Govender, Kate Holland.
    Reminder of title: media, trust, and public engagement /
    other author: Lewis, Monique.
    Published: Cham :Springer International Publishing : : 2024.,
    Description: xxxiii, 501 p. :ill. (chiefly col.), digital ;24 cm.
    [NT 15003449]: Chapter 1: Introduction. Monique Lewis, Eliza Govender, Kate Holland. Section 1: Public Interest Journalism, News, and Community Media. - Chapter 2: Community Radio in the Covid-19 Crisis: Lessons from global dialogues. Vinod Pavarala -- Chapter 3: Answering Questions: Explanatory journalism and podcast 'liveness' during COVID. Mia Lindgren and Dylan Bird -- Chapter 4: 'We're Losing Our Bread and Butter Like Never Before': Journalism in the face of Covid-19 pandemic. Shaharior Rahman Razu -- Chapter 5: The Covid-19 Pandemic in Portuguese Journalism. Rita Araujo et al -- Chapter 6: Impact of Covid-19 on Journalistic Practices in Emerging Democracies. Sayyed Fawad Ali Shah and Faizullah Jah -- Chapter 7: COVID and the Future of Journalism. David Nolan et al -- Chapter 8: Media Depictions of Remote General Practice Care in a Protracted Pandemic. Gilly Mroz and Trish Greenhalgh -- Section 2: Risk Communication and Community Engagement -- Chapter 9: Perceptions of Risk and Self-Efficacy About COVID messaging in South African Townships. Mpume Gumede and Eliza Govender -- Chapter 10. Rethinking Community Engagement For Research in Pandemic Times: Lessons from the future. Theresa Rossouw et al -- Chapter 11: Application of the Extended Paralax Process Model in Cote D'Ivoire. Danielle Naugle -- Chapter 12: 'What's Up, Fellow Deadly Diseases?': Creative arts and communicating Covid-19 in Ghana. Ama de-Graft Aikins -- Chapter 13: Much Ado about Covid-19 Vaccines: Understanding perceptions and experiences of vaccines among health care workers and its influence on patient COVID-19 communication in Eswatini hospitals. Nqobile Ndinzisa and Eliza Govender -- Section 3: Vaccine Communication and Digital Technologies -- Chapter 14: COVID-19 and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People in Australia: Can rhetoric equal action?. Kalinda Griffiths -- Chapter 15: Far-right Political Extremism and the Radicalization of the Anti-vaccine Movement in Canada. Sibo Chen -- Chapter 16: Harnessing Interpersonal Communication and Trusted Leadership to Increase COVID-19 Vaccination Uptake in Hard-to-Reach Wildlife Communities in Uganda. Barbara Natifu -- Chapter 17: Function Creep of Covid-19 of Big-Data Surveillance in China. Ausma Bernot and Susan Trevaskes -- Chapter 18: Identifying Novel COVID-19 Rumors Through a Multi-Channel Approach. Natalie Tibbels -- Chapter 19: Creating Demand for COVID-19 Vaccines Through a Coordinated Social Media Campaign: Religious leaders and health experts. Stella Babalola -- Section 4: Theoretical and Philosophical Concepts for Understanding Covid Communication -- Chapter 20: Values, Worldviews, Ideology and Reactance: Communication in a pandemic. Claire Hooker and Mat Marques -- Chapter 21: Communicating Ableism in a Pandemic: Compassion, vulnerability and the violence of care. Michael Orsini -- Chapter 22: Critical Health Literacy and Scientific Literacy as a Basis for Individual Appraisals of Health Information During Public Health Emergencies. Sarah Rubinelli et al -- Chapter 23: TBC. Mark Davis -- Chapter 24: Conclusion.
    Contained By: Springer Nature eBook
    Subject: COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020-, in mass media. -
    Online resource: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-41237-0
    ISBN: 9783031412370
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