Part 1: Introduction.- Chapter 1: Global inequalities in health and Africa.- Part 2: Conceptual approaches.- Chapter 2: Health beliefs and communication: conceptual approaches.- Chapter 3: Understanding Community Development Approaches in health.- Part 3: Stigma and health.- Chapter 4: Alzheimer’s disease – molecular defect, public perceptions and stigma in South Africa.- Chapter 5: Toward a better understanding of HIV Prevention stigma, religion and health in Zimbabwe.- Chapter 6: Sinikithemba Gospel Group and the Grassroots Struggle against HIV/AIDS Stigma in South Africa.- Part 4: Risk perception and health.- Chapter 7: “Fat people are more respected: Socio-cultural Construction of Obesity and overweight Risk & Prevention in Ugandan Communities.- Chapter 8: “… I had to do this to survive”: HIV risk environment of female street sex work in Nigeria.- Part 5: Reproductive health, traditions and beliefs.- Chapter 9: The sociolinguistic functions of English and Chichewa in Gynaecological Consultations in a Chichewa speaking Hospital Setting in Malawi.- Chapter 10: Evil spirits and martyrdom as perceptions of preeclampsia among traditional birth attendants in Kano, North-West Nigeria.- Part 6: Mental health.- Chapter 11: Culture and Mental Healthcare Access in the Moroccan Context.- Chapter 12: Social media effects on mental Health: A study of ‘Selfitis’ among undergraduates of a Nigerian university.- Part 7: Communities, western and indigenous communication.- Chapter 13: Collective change through mass media: Engaging adolescent girls through interactive radio to promote AIDS-free communities in Kenya.- Chapter 14: Combating malaria in Nigeria’s rural communities through indigenous communication strategies.- Chapter 15: Indigenous and contemporary knowledge as interventions to reduce teenage pregnancy in South Africa.- Part 8: Religion and health communication.- Chapter 16: Covid-19, religious institutions and the accommodation of science in Africa.- Part 9: Conclusion.- Chapter 17: Is science enough? Health communication and health enabling environments.- Index.
Bankole Falade is a research fellow with the South African Research Chair in Science Communication, Stellenbosch University, South Africa and Visiting Fellow, Department of Psychological and Behavioural Sciences, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom. His research interests are in science and health communication.
Mercy Murire is a Senior researcher at the Wits Reproductive Health Institute (WRHI) and a researcher at University of Witwatersrand with the school of clinical medicine. Her research interests are in psychology and public health focusing on the intersections between sexual and reproductive health (SRH), mental health, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), HIV prevention, HIV stigma, contraceptives, and gender-based violence in adolescent girls and young women.
‘This book will be of great value to health practitioners and policy-makers, researchers
and students. Chapters showcase a range of theoretical approaches to health
communication skilfully linked by the editors’ Introductory and Concluding chapters.
Together they provide the basis for a theoretical toolkit for the development of
actionable understandings of the processes through which abstract scientific
knowledge is communicated to real people in real contexts – and the social and
psychological factors that mediate the success of a communication.
It presents a compelling vision of an approach that is deeply rooted in African
scholarship.’
— Catherine Campbell, Emeritus Professor of Social Psychology, Department
of Psychological and Behavioural Science, London School of Economics and
Political Science, UK
Bankole Falade is a research fellow with the South African Research Chair in
Science Communication, Stellenbosch University, South Africa and Visiting
Fellow, Department of Psychological and Behavioural Sciences, London School of
Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom. His research interests are in
science and health communication.
Mercy Murire is a Senior researcher at the Wits Reproductive Health Institute
(WRHI) and a researcher at University of Witwatersrand with the school of clinical
medicine. Her research interests are in psychology and public health focusing on
the intersections between sexual and reproductive health (SRH), mental health,
sexually transmitted infections (STIs), HIV prevention, HIV stigma, contraceptives,
and gender-based violence in adolescent girls and young women.