TY - BOOK AU - Kreps, Gary L. TI - Health communication SN - 9781847875785 U1 - 302.2 PY - 2010/// CY - Los Angeles PB - Sage Publications N1 - Volume III: Health Risk Communication Introduction: Health Communication and Health Risk Communication vii Gary L. Kreps 46. The Framing of Decisions and the Psychology of Choice 1 Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman 47. Treating the Public with Risk Communications: A Public Health Perspective 17 Baruch Fischhoff 48. Why Rules for Risk Communication Are Not Enough: A Problem-Solving Approach to Risk Communication 29 Katherine E. Rowan 49. Risk Perception and Communication Unplugged: Twenty Years of Process 47 Baruch Fischhojf 50. Communication Channels and Risk Information: A Cost-Utility Model 63 Craig W. Trumbo 51. Corporate Environmental Risk Communication: Cases and Practices along the Texas Gulf Coast 75 Robert L Heath 52. Communication, Organization, and Crisis 99 Matthew W. Seeger, Timothy L. Sellnow and Robert R. Ulmer 53. Risk Communication in Genetic Testing for Cancer Susceptibility 143 Robert T. Croyle and Caryn Lerman 54. The Visual Communication of Risk 161 Isaac M. Lipkus and J.G. Hollands 55. Heuristic-Systematic Information Processing and Risk Judgment 195 Craig W. Trumbo 56. Informing Women about Their Breast Cancer Risks: Truth and Consequences 211 Isaac M. Lipkus, Monica Biradavolu, Kathryn Fenn, Punam Keller and Barbara K. Rimer 57. The Informatics Response in Disaster, Terrorism, and War 233 Jonathan M. Teich, Michael M. Wagner, Colin F. Mackenzie and Klaus O. Schafer 58. The Function of Credibility in Information Processing for Risk Perception 247 Craig W. Trumbo and Katherine A McComas 59. The CAUSE Model: A Research-Supported Aid for Physicians Communicating with Patients about Cancer Risk 265 Katherine E. Rowan, Lisa Sparks, Loretta Pecchioni and Melinda M. Villagran 60. Leave No One Behind: Improving Health and Risk Communication through Attention to Literacy 279 Rima E. Rudd, John P. Comings and James N. Hyde 61. Best Practices in Public Health Risk and Crisis Communication 293 Vincent T. Covello 62. Communication Lessons Learned in the Emergency Operations Center during CDC's Anthrax Response: A Commentary 297 Marsha L. Vanderford 63. Gene Cuisine or Frankenfood? The Theory of Reasoned Action as an Audience Segmentation Strategy for Messages about Genetically Modified Foods 301 Kami J. Silk, Judith Weiner and Roxanne L. Parrott 64. Formats for Improving Risk Communication in Medical Tradeoff Decisions 321 Erika A Waters, Neil D. Weinstein, Graham A Colditz and Karen Emmons 65. Social Sides of Health Risks: Stigma and Collective Efficacy 339 Rachel A Smith, Merissa Ferrara and Kim Witte 66. Action, Not Talk: A Simtilatdon of Risk Communication during the First Hours of a Pandemic 357 Vicki S. Freimuth, Karen M. Hilyard, J. Kevin Barge and Lynn A Sokler 67. Crisis and Emergency Risk Communication in a Pandemic: A Model for Building Capacity and Resilience of Minority Communities 375 Sandra Grouse Quinn 68. Effective Communication during an Influenza Pandemic: The Value of Using a Crisis and Emergency Risk Communication Framework 387 Barbara Reynolds and Sandra Grouse Quinn 69. Evaluating Emergency Risk Communications: A Dialogue with the Experts 395 Graig W. Thomas, Marsha L. Vanderford and Sandra Grouse Quinn ER -