I am preparing a proposal for post graduate study on 'Types, scope and prospects of health communication in Bangladesh'. But I am lacking of related literature severely.
Alasad, J., & Ahmad, M. Muayyad. (2005). Communication with the critically ill patients: The nurses’ experience. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 50 (4), 356-362.
This area is now gaining interest as far as research is concerned. Most of the literature is quite old but useful. Secondly health communication depends on what area one is focusing on; for example due to its burden, HIV and AIDS has received a lot of attention on behavior change. You may have to consider checking information by United Nations Population fund, FHI, UNICEF just to mention a few.
There is some work that was done by Piotraw-1997-Health communication lessons and communication for behavior by Tanjong-2003
Lastly i would suggest that you also look at communication theories they will give you direction on the literature to look for.
This is an area that has been looked at over the years in varying degrees based on multiple disciplines of study. There actually is a fair amount of literature available. However, it is not always published where you might think or using the key words that you are. To better help you, can you elaborate on the type of communication that you are interested in, because the system dynamics/interactions can change pretty radically based on the scenario. For example the amount and depth of the literature available will depend on if the communication is physician to patient in face-to-face, physician to patient using telephone/internet/video, physician to nurse as team members, physician to nurse outside of the immediate team, physician to physician within the same system/organization, physician to physician in two different systems/organizations, etc..
Hi. This area are very interessant. I have some articles but with young and drugs. I will send somethings. I can send for you one list the references. Elda
Also the CDC has a term called best practices for different public health interventions and in them there is usually a section called Mass-Reach Health Communication. Here is one on smoking. I'm assuming that you aren't looking for a specific campaign but rather different health communication campaigns as teaching tools for a lecture series? Is that correct. If you can get to the specifics I'd be happy to help further. http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/stateandcommunity/best_practices/pdfs/2014/sectionA-II.pdf
Without further refinement of the question, the only thing I can suggest is what I would do performing a literature review of such a broad topic. All of the post have give specifics to the individual items/characteristics that all make-up a patient encounter or the result of it, whether it is face-to-face or virtual (phone, video, chat, etc.). Since encounters are about the patient, I would start the the ideal characteristics that make up the purest form of the patient encounter...the face-to-face patient-physician time using a patient -centered approach primary care (highest variation of encounter types). In principle, all other communications that happen in their various forms (nurse, another doctor, pharmacist, nutritionist, family member, etc.) are a result of this event. This will allow you to work your way out from the source and know how many degrees of separation a specific communication is from the origin (grapevine effect). Within the literature, how doctors approach individual patients has been examined long before everyone started calling it "patient-centered" care. The following are some cites to get you started...good luck!
Roter DL, Stewart M, Putnam SM, Lipkin M, Stiles W, Inui TS. Communication patterns of primary care physicians. JAMA. 1997; 227(4): 350-356.
Shaughnessy AF, Slawson DC, Becker L. Clinical Jazz: harmonizing clinicial experience and evidence-based medicine. J Fam Pract. 1998; 47(6): 425-428.
Bensing JM, Roter DL, Hulsman RL. Communication patterns of primary care physicians in the United States and the Netherlands. J Gen Intern Med. 2003; 18(5): 335-342.
Crabtree BF, Miller ML, Tallia AF, Coben DJ, DiCicco-Bloom B, McIlvain HE, Aita VA, Scott JG, Gregory PB, Strange KC, McDaniel RR. Delivery of clinical preventive services in family medicine offices. Ann Fam Med. 2005; 3 (5): 430-435.
Haidet P. Jazz and the 'art' of Medicine: improvisatioin in the medical encounter. Ann Fam Med. 2007; 5(2): 164-169.
Parrott, R. (2004). Emphasizing “communication” in health communication. Journal of Communication, 54(4), 751-787.
Obregon, C. O. A. R. (2000). A critical assessment of theories/models used in health communication for HIV/AIDS. Journal of health communication, 5(sup1), 5-15.
Dutta-Bergman, M. J. (2005). Theory and practice in health communication campaigns: A critical interrogation. Health communication, 18(2), 103-122.
Kreuter, M. W., & Wray, R. J. (2003). Tailored and targeted health communication: strategies for enhancing information relevance. American Journal of Health Behavior, 27(Supplement 3), S227-S232.
Hornik, R. (Ed.). (2002). Public health communication: Evidence for behavior change. Routledge.
Maibach, E. W., & Parrott, R. L. (Eds.). (1995). Designing health messages: Approaches from communication theory and public health practice. Sage Publications.
Kreps, G. L., & Thornton, B. C. (1992). Health communication: Theory & practice. Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press.
Thompson, T. L., Parrott, R., & Nussbaum, J. F. (Eds.). (2011). Routledge handbook of health communication. Routledge.