Communicating Medical Information Online. The Case of Adolescent Health Websites

In recent times, our understanding and practice of public health has been increasingly guided by technological advances generally based on governmental decisions (Green et al. 2009). Not only does the growth of a public system for protecting health hinge upon scientific discovery and dissemination o...

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Main Author: Giulia Adriana Pennisi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of Verona 2020-06-01
Series:Iperstoria
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iperstoria.it/article/view/630
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spelling doaj-4c89447b705e4be3b59d4d9fdf2571a62021-03-03T11:47:34ZengDepartment of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of VeronaIperstoria2281-45822020-06-0101510.13136/2281-4582/2020.i15.630537Communicating Medical Information Online. The Case of Adolescent Health WebsitesGiulia Adriana PennisiIn recent times, our understanding and practice of public health has been increasingly guided by technological advances generally based on governmental decisions (Green et al. 2009). Not only does the growth of a public system for protecting health hinge upon scientific discovery and dissemination of medical knowledge, but also the World Wide Web has considerably changed the health communication environment. This paper considers the online health information addressed to adolescents. Given that young people have difficulty accessing traditional health services, in theory, the Internet might offer them a more confidential and convenient access to an unprecedented level of information about a diverse range of subjects (Hansen et al. 2003). In this context, the analysis concentrates on ‘adolescent health,’ and compares and contrasts the discourse of three websites: Healthdirect, a free service supported by the Government of Australia, SAHM managed by a multidisciplinary society based in the USA, Canada and the UK, and TeenMentalHealth.Org managed by the WHO (World Health Organization) Collaborating Centre in Mental Health Policy and Training. The study is designed to highlight both the specificities of communication of ‘adolescent health’ (Harvey 2014; Gotti, Maci and Sala 2015; Garzone and Ilie 2014), and the linguistic/discoursal and visual strategies adopted over the dedicated online platforms. Given the communicative immediacy of the new medium and the specificities of the target audience, it becomes crucial to see how the selected websites both linguistically and visually communicate medical information to adolescent web-users (LeVine and Scollon 2004; Kolucki and Lemish 2011).https://iperstoria.it/article/view/630multimodalitydiscourse analysisonline communicationmedical informationadolescents
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Giulia Adriana Pennisi
spellingShingle Giulia Adriana Pennisi
Communicating Medical Information Online. The Case of Adolescent Health Websites
Iperstoria
multimodality
discourse analysis
online communication
medical information
adolescents
author_facet Giulia Adriana Pennisi
author_sort Giulia Adriana Pennisi
title Communicating Medical Information Online. The Case of Adolescent Health Websites
title_short Communicating Medical Information Online. The Case of Adolescent Health Websites
title_full Communicating Medical Information Online. The Case of Adolescent Health Websites
title_fullStr Communicating Medical Information Online. The Case of Adolescent Health Websites
title_full_unstemmed Communicating Medical Information Online. The Case of Adolescent Health Websites
title_sort communicating medical information online. the case of adolescent health websites
publisher Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of Verona
series Iperstoria
issn 2281-4582
publishDate 2020-06-01
description In recent times, our understanding and practice of public health has been increasingly guided by technological advances generally based on governmental decisions (Green et al. 2009). Not only does the growth of a public system for protecting health hinge upon scientific discovery and dissemination of medical knowledge, but also the World Wide Web has considerably changed the health communication environment. This paper considers the online health information addressed to adolescents. Given that young people have difficulty accessing traditional health services, in theory, the Internet might offer them a more confidential and convenient access to an unprecedented level of information about a diverse range of subjects (Hansen et al. 2003). In this context, the analysis concentrates on ‘adolescent health,’ and compares and contrasts the discourse of three websites: Healthdirect, a free service supported by the Government of Australia, SAHM managed by a multidisciplinary society based in the USA, Canada and the UK, and TeenMentalHealth.Org managed by the WHO (World Health Organization) Collaborating Centre in Mental Health Policy and Training. The study is designed to highlight both the specificities of communication of ‘adolescent health’ (Harvey 2014; Gotti, Maci and Sala 2015; Garzone and Ilie 2014), and the linguistic/discoursal and visual strategies adopted over the dedicated online platforms. Given the communicative immediacy of the new medium and the specificities of the target audience, it becomes crucial to see how the selected websites both linguistically and visually communicate medical information to adolescent web-users (LeVine and Scollon 2004; Kolucki and Lemish 2011).
topic multimodality
discourse analysis
online communication
medical information
adolescents
url https://iperstoria.it/article/view/630
work_keys_str_mv AT giuliaadrianapennisi communicatingmedicalinformationonlinethecaseofadolescenthealthwebsites
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