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[Commlist] CFP: Helpline Communication in Healthcare, Social Work, and Civil Society
Fri Jun 05 22:23:19 GMT 2026
Call for papers
*Special Issue of QHC: Helpline Communication in Healthcare, Social
Work, and Civil Society*
People facing various difficult life situations, crises, or
vulnerabilities have a range of mediated options for seeking help and
support. These include emergency services, teleconsultations within
traditional healthcare, and mediated interactions with social workers
and civil society organizations, such as helplines, which offer various
forms of anonymous support. This special issue of /Qualitative Health
Communication/ invites contributions that explore helpline communication
in its broadest sense and across different organizational contexts.
By “helpline”, we understand services that provide mediated,
low-threshold and free support to individuals navigating difficult life
situations, operating across a range of media — telephone, chat, email,
SMS, and beyond. Within the health domain, helplines are typically
operated either by NGOs connecting individuals with specific concerns to
trained professionals, volunteers, or peers, or by public sector
institutions such as emergency services within hospital or social care
settings. “Helpline communication” thus includes any mediated
interaction between users and responders involved in providing help to
these users, as well as the broader communicative practices, policies,
and technologies that shape such interactions.
We are particularly interested in contributions that engage critically
and reflexively with the communicative dimensions of helpline work —
whether at the level of individual interaction, organizational practice,
or societal discourse. As helplines increasingly integrate digital
technologies, serve diverse and multilingual populations, and navigate
complex ethical terrain, qualitative approaches are uniquely positioned
to illuminate the lived experiences, relational dynamics, and
institutional forces at play.
Possible topics include (but are not limited to):
* Helpline communication for emergency services
* Helplines in civil society
* Communicative norms and expectations in helpline work
* The language and imagery of helpline communication
* Synchronous and asynchronous communication in helpline work
* Helplines as spaces for mental health support, therapy, or health
coaching
* User and patient perceptions and experiences of helpline use
* The narrative and discursive construction of trust, authority, or
empathy in helpline interactions
* Ethical tensions in helpline communication
* Institutional discourses and policies shaping communicative
practices in helplines
* Helplines in multilingual and multicultural health contexts
* Training helpline responders in communication skills
* The use of AI, machine learning, or other technologies in helpline
communication
* Communicating with frequent users or specific user segments
We welcome articles that deal with one or some of the above topics as
well as other topics related to helpline communication.
*Submission types:* We welcome original research articles, literature
reviews, conceptual papers, theoretical contributions, and
methodological pieces. All submissions must have a strong qualitative
focus and engage with questions relevant to health communication.
Interdisciplinary perspectives are encouraged.
*Guest editors*
Trine Natasja Sindahl, Aarhus University, Denmark
Tine Bennedsen Gehrt, Aarhus University and Central Denmark Region, Denmark
Carsten Stage, Aarhus University, Denmark
*Timeline*
* Call for papers published: 1 June 2026
* Brief abstract by mail: 1 September 2026
* Notification: 15 September 2026
* Manuscript submission: 15 December 2026
* Peer review process: 15 December 2026 - 1 February 2027
* Revision process: 1 February - 10 March 2027
* Final decision and notification: 1 April 2027
* Copyediting: 1 April - 15 May 2027
* Publication of the special issue: May 2027
*Submission Guidelines*
Interested contributors are invited to send a brief abstract (100-200
words) addressing the research topic, the helpline, data and the
qualitative methods applied by* 1 September 2026 *to the journal’s email
address ((qhc-journal /at/ au.dk) <mailto:(qhc-journal /at/ au.dk)>). Authors will
receive notification of whether their potential contribution is
considered within the scope of the special issue by 15 September 2026.
Manuscripts are due by 15 December 2026.
Full manuscript submissions should be submitted through the journal's
online submission system. Articles will go through the ordinary peer
review process. Please indicate in the cover letter that your submission
is intended for the special issue on “Helpline Communication”. Authors
should adhere to the journal's author guidelines
(https://tidsskrift.dk/qhc/about/submissions
<https://tidsskrift.dk/qhc/about/submissions>).
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