Disease metaphors in new epidemics: the UK media framing of the 2003 SARS epidemic.
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Using model-based evidence in the governance of pandemics.Public media communications about H1N1, risk perceptions and immunization behaviours: A Quebec-France comparison.'We had to do what we thought was right at the time': retrospective discourse on the 2009 H1N1 pandemic in the UK.Framing of Influenza A (H1N1) pandemic in a Singaporean newspaper.Monitoring of risk perceptions and correlates of precautionary behaviour related to human avian influenza during 2006 - 2007 in the Netherlands: results of seven consecutive surveys.Skepticism toward Emerging Infectious Diseases and Influenza Vaccination Intentions in Nurses.From press release to news: mapping the framing of the 2009 H1N1 A influenza pandemic.Newsprint media representations of the introduction of the HPV vaccination programme for cervical cancer prevention in the UK (2005-2008).Why people drink shampoo? Food Imitating Products are fooling brains and endangering consumers for marketing purposes.Expectations in the field of the internet and health: an analysis of claims about social networking sites in clinical literatureWould you say you had unprotected sex if ...? Sexual health language in emails to a reproductive health website.Modafinil in the media: metaphors, medicalisation and the body."Editing" Genes: A Case Study About How Language Matters in Bioethics.Weighing the Costs of Disaster: Consequences, Risks, and Resilience in Individuals, Families, and Communities.Political drivers of epidemic response: foreign healthcare workers and the 2014 Ebola outbreak.Information visualisation as a resource for popularising the technical-biomedical aspects of the last Ebola virus epidemic: The case of the Spanish reference press.Polarised press reporting about HIV prevention: Social representations of pre-exposure prophylaxis in the UK press.The Public Sphere in Emerging Infectious Disease Communication: Recipient or Active and Vocal Partner?Media, risk, and absence of blame for "acts of God": attenuation of the European volcanic ash cloud of 2010.Determinants of public phobia about infectious diseases in South Korea: effect of health communication and gender difference.Differences by degree: fatness, contagion and pre-emption.Lay perceptions of collectives at the outbreak of the H1N1 epidemic: heroes, villains and victims.Metaphoric language and the articulation of emotions by people affected by motor neurone disease.The generalized polymorphous concept account of graded structure in abstract categories.Fear-Mongering or Fact-Driven? Illuminating the Interplay of Objective Risk and Emotion-Evoking Form in the Response to Epidemic News.Charisma and the clinicWhen Safe Means ‘Dangerous’: A Corpus Investigation of Risk Communication in the MediaMedia, Metaphors and ModellingThe Epidemiology of Human DiseaseThe Dead Parrot and the Dying Swan: The Role of Metaphor Scenarios in UK Press Coverage of Avian Flu in the UK in 2005–2006Constructing health news: possibilities for a civic-oriented journalismRisk and Resilience Analysis of Complex Network Systems Considering Cascading Failure and Recovery Strategy Based on Coupled Map Lattices
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P2860
Disease metaphors in new epidemics: the UK media framing of the 2003 SARS epidemic.
description
2005 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2005年の論文
@ja
2005年論文
@yue
2005年論文
@zh-hant
2005年論文
@zh-hk
2005年論文
@zh-mo
2005年論文
@zh-tw
2005年论文
@wuu
2005年论文
@zh
2005年论文
@zh-cn
name
Disease metaphors in new epidemics: the UK media framing of the 2003 SARS epidemic.
@en
type
label
Disease metaphors in new epidemics: the UK media framing of the 2003 SARS epidemic.
@en
prefLabel
Disease metaphors in new epidemics: the UK media framing of the 2003 SARS epidemic.
@en
P1476
Disease metaphors in new epidemics: the UK media framing of the 2003 SARS epidemic.
@en
P2093
Patrick Wallis
P304
P356
10.1016/J.SOCSCIMED.2004.11.031
P407
P577
2005-01-11T00:00:00Z