Displaying 1291 - 1300 of 8503
Mikesell, L., Marti, A. F., Guzmán, J. R., McCreary, M., & Zima, B. (2020). Attending to parent and child rights to make medication decisions during pediatric psychiatry visits. In E. H. Weiste, Stevanovic, M. T., & C. C. Lindholm (Eds.), Joint decision making in mental health: Participation and choice in face-to-face interactional encounters (pp. 69-94). Palgrave.
Mikesell, L. (2020). Does atypicality entail impairment? Tracing a cohesive marker in the interactions of an individual with schizophrenia. In R. Wilkinson, J. Rae, & G. Rasmussen (Eds.), Atypical interaction: Impacts of communicative impairments within everyday talk (pp. 129-160). Cham, Switzerland: Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave.
Mikesell, L., Marti, A., Guzmán, J. R., McCreary, M., & Zima, B. (2018). Affordances of mHealth technology and the structuring of clinic communication. Journal of Applied Communication Research, 46(3), 323-347
Mikesell, L., Bromley, E., Young, A. S., Vona, P., & Zima, B. (2016). Integrating client and clinician perspectives on psychotropic medication treatment: Developing a communication-centered epistemic model of shared-decision making for mental health contexts. Health Communication, 31(6), 707-717.
Mikesell, L., Bromley, E., & Khodyakov, D. (2013). Ethical community-engaged research: A literature review. American Journal of Public Health, 103(12), e7-e14.
Jenny Mandelbaum, Darcey deSouza, Wan Wei & Kaicheng Zhan (2021): Micro-moments of social support: Self-service-occasioned offers at the family dinner table, Communication Monographs.
Rutgers Giving Day is an annual 24-hour day of giving to raise funds for students, schools, and programs.
Caitlin Smits, a current Master of Information student who’s completing the program online from her home in Minnesota, has been on a journey to find a career that’s the right fit.
Carol Ann Farino was murdered in Maplewood, N.J. in 1966 and her killer has still not been caught. In his new book about the case, Joe Strupp, a reporter for the Asbury Park Press and SC&I part time lecturer, explores the murder and its aftermath, and describes the challenges involved in reporting on true crime.
In his newest book, “Four Streets and a Square,” Marc Aronson explores 400 years of Manhattan’s history, with a focus on what he has coined “The New York City Idea”: the value of mixture, of people, of ideas, and of cultures found in New York City.”