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“Sympathy Sockpuppets,” members of online communities who employ deceptive personas to gain sympathy and care from other members, can have a devastating impact on the groups they infiltrate, according to new research by Assistant Professor Kaitlin Costello.
Associate Professor Lisa Mikesell, an expert on patient-provider communication and relationships, presented her expertise in a training webinar created by The Rutgers Global Tuberculosis Institute that was used by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Evidence of renewed interest in the study of how the places we live in impact our health can be found across many disciplines, ranging from sociology and public health to geography and economics.
This graduate seminar examines issues of interpersonal dynamics when talking about health and healthcare.
Find Your Voice! Sign up for the virtual speaking contest.
This course provides an overview of theory and research related to the role of the media in promoting public health efforts and advances.
Students read and study the journalism of the U.S. civil rights movement (1954-1968) to understand its historical role
This 3 credit embedded course takes students to Ireland for 8 days to study the role of Irish (Gaelic) journalism and media in historic and current struggles for political autonomy and cultural ide