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
-
“Best Paper/Show Bible” at the 2025 Broadcast Education Association BEA) Festival of Media ArtsMatthew Evans won “Best Paper/Show Bible” at the 2025 Broadcast Education Association BEA) Festival of Media Arts with his show bible for his original TV series THE DEVIL’S RUST. He […]
-
Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s DeadNeil Landau’s remake of “Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead” (2024) was picked up by SHOUT! Studios to distribute across all digital platforms worldwide. Landau is credited as co-writer and […]