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[ecrea] Conference: Chronic Disease & Language #healthsci17
Tue Nov 14 09:15:47 GMT 2017
You can still book your place for #healthsci17 - “Chronic Disease and
Language: Understanding Social and Linguistic Representations to Improve
Treatment and Prevention” by 19 NOVEMBER, NOON (GMT) at the following
link:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chronic-disease-and-language-tickets-38887821521
#healthsci17 is the annual workshop of the “Health & Science
Communication” Special Interest Group of the British Association for
Applied Linguistics. The workshop will be held on 29 November 2017,
hosted by the Department of Linguistics and English Language, Lancaster
University.
Chronic Disease and Language: Understanding Social and Linguistic
Representations to Improve Treatment and Prevention
‘Chronic disease’, ‘long-term condition’ and ‘non-communicable disease’
are often used interchangeably to refer to conditions that can be
managed, but not cured. Despite the synonymous use, these terms frame
differently the conditions they describe – foregrounding the duration of
the disease or its mechanism of operation. This ‘what’s in a name’
example is a good if crude illustration of how language can shape our
thinking about chronic disease. As chronic diseases become more
widespread among populations worldwide, they are also increasingly the
target of government initiatives for treatment and prevention and
therefore, increasingly the focus of text and talk. From a discourse
studies perspective, texts do not simply describe the reality of a
chronic condition. By drawing on some types of knowledge and not others,
incorporating the voices of some actors but not others and highlighting
certain aspects of a condition and not others, they help construct the
reality of that condition. Research has revealed how health-related
information leaflets, media articles, policy documents and more
recently, social marketing campaign advertisements explicitly or
implicitly prioritise certain causes, propose solutions, allocate
responsibility and ultimately, construct particular understandings of
chronic diseases and what needs to be done about them. A finding that
runs through much of the literature is about the prevalence of an
individualised discourse and/or a victim-blaming style and
stigmatisation of the affected individuals.
In recent years, the focus on early intervention and prevention of
chronic diseases has intensified in parallel with a growing
understanding that solving chronic disease problems would require multi-
or trans-disciplinary research and taking a much broader view of the
drivers of health beyond the individual level. This workshop brings
together researchers from the fields of the social sciences, humanities
and beyond to share findings relating to the key challenges and
opportunities that representations pose to treatment and prevention targets.
Keynotes include:
*Dr Shona Hilton: The Importance of Stakeholder Involvement and Media
Framing in Global Health Policy Debates about NCDs
For the first time in history non-communicable diseases (NCDs) now pose
a greater global health burden than communicable infectious diseases and
the media play a crucial role in framing public and policy debates about
the causes of, and solutions to, NCDs. While the literature suggests
that media debates should be a key concern for those interested in
understanding public health policy processes, as yet there has been only
limited research in this area. In politically-contested health policy
debates, stakeholders often seek to engage the media to communicate
arguments to the public for or against specific policy initiatives,
consistent with their underlying interests. This seminar presents the
findings from a scoping review on media representations of industries
that contribute to NCD risk and provides evidence from the current
sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) taxation debate to highlight how
stakeholders engage with the media to shape public and political
opinion. This complex inter-dependency between the strategies used by
stakeholders to influence global health debates and framing of evidence
in media policy debates is poorly understood yet is crucial to
understand if we are to tackle how the global producers and marketers of
unhealthy commodities employ the media to directly lobby the public and
set the policy agenda.
*Prof Rusi Jaspal: Wonder Drug or Party Drug? Representations and
Perceptions of HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis
In the era of antiretroviral therapy, HIV is now considered a manageable
chronic illness. Yet, it remains a stigmatised and feared health
condition. Over the last decade, HIV incidence has been rising steadily
among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (MSM). This has
led to novel ways of approaching HIV prevention beyond the use of
condoms. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is a novel bio-medical HIV
prevention tool, which has been discussed in scientific, social and
political domains. It is highly effective if used properly and has in
fact contributed to significant drop in new HIV diagnoses among MSM in
London. Despite the proven effectiveness of PrEP, opponents argue that
the HIV prevention drug poses a number of risks, which has induced
scepticism in groups that could benefit from PrEP. Focusing on the
linguistic, discursive and social aspects of debates around PrEP, this
keynote lecture explores (1) coverage of PrEP in the UK print media, and
(2) how a group of ethnically diverse HIV-negative MSM perceive PrEP as
a potential means of protecting themselves from HIV infection, and how a
group of HIV-positive MSM perceive PrEP as a means of reducing social
stigma surrounding HIV. The future of HIV prevention among gay, bisexual
and other MSM is discussed in view of these research findings. Moreover,
the social and psychological implications of social representations of
PrEP are discussed in relation to sexual identity, behaviour and health
among gay/bisexual men. It is argued that language is central to
effective HIV prevention.
Visit our website for the full programme and book of abstracts:
http://www.baal-health.uk/
Find us on Facebook:
https://en-gb.facebook.com/Health-and-Science-Communication-SIG-100170477003151/
On Twitter: follow #healthsci17 to keep up to date with all event news
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