Is Readiness for Cancer Misinformation Contagious? Physician-Patient Communication and Psychological Factors Impacting Cancer Misinformation Belief
Is Readiness for Cancer Misinformation Contagious? Physician-Patient Communication and Psychological Factors Impacting Cancer Misinformation Belief
Brittany N. Shivers (PhD Student; Project Lead), Megan Pietruszewski Norman, Jiaqi (Agnes) Bao, Nicole Cortes (Undergraduate Student), and Yan Jin (Faculty PI) were awarded with $5,000 by Arthur W. Page Center for Integrity in Public Communication for a project titled "Is Readiness for Cancer Misinformation Contagious? Physician-Patient Communication and Psychological Factors Impacting Cancer Misinformation Belief" (2024-2025).
Related Research
-
Glen Nowak was an invited panelist for a University Research Magazine Association (URMA)Glen Nowak was an invited panelist for a University Research Magazine Association (URMA) online “URMA Live” webinar on “Garnering trust on tough topics” on February 18. He was one of three […]
-
United Press Associations: Collective Action for Local News Outlets?Karin Assman, “United Press Associations: Collective Action for Local News Outlets?” accepted for presentation (and organization) at the 2026 Local Journalism Researchers Workshop this April in Washington, D.C. Overview: This presentation […]