Academic literature on the topic 'Medicinal discourse'

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Journal articles on the topic "Medicinal discourse"

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Morris, Craig. "Medicinal Cannabis Users Downplaying and Shifting Stigma: Articulations of the ‘Natural’, of What Is/Is Not a ‘Drug’ and Oppositions with ‘Chemical’ Substances." Sociological Research Online 25, no. 3 (September 18, 2019): 350–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1360780419870814.

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While sympathy exists among the public for chronically ill and/or disabled people who use cannabis medicinally, cannabis remains a prohibited substance in the UK. How do medicinal cannabis users negotiate this potential stigma when talking about their use of this substance? I reflect on the spoken discourses of 10 medicinal cannabis users (from a sample of 32), obtained by way of qualitative interviews, adopting a critical discourse analysis approach to the data. Specifically, I focus on their articulations around three related themes: cannabis as a ‘natural’ substance, discursive oppositions between cannabis and other substances, and articulations about what is/is not a ‘drug’. I examine how participants articulated these themes in ways that attempted to negotiate the potential for stigma that talking about their cannabis use involved. I found they used rhetorical strategies that downplay their own deviance, attempt to shift the application of stigma to users of other substances, or both. I argue that the more powerful the discursive resources that are articulated, the less rhetorical work an individual has to do to negotiate positive moral standing in an encounter. I also consider to what degree these articulations involved constructions emphasising individual self-control. I argue participants emphasise their individual self-control by asserting that cannabis is a ‘natural’ substance (connoting less inherent risk).
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Ishmukhametova, Anita Sh. "Лексико-семантический анализ лексемы балтырған (с использованием материалов корпуса башкирского языка)." Oriental Studies 13, no. 5 (December 28, 2020): 1406–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.22162/2619-0990-2020-51-5-1406-1414.

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Identification of names of plant curatives and substances in folk and fiction texts shows close interactions between man and the world, attitudes of people towards nature. Research in phytonyms and medicinal plant names proper is most essential for the understanding of a nation’s cultural heritage. The paper examines the lexeme балтырған in Bashkir discourse. Materials. The analyzed materials include linguistic dictionaries, folklore and fiction texts of the Machine Fund of the Bashkir Language, and etymological dictionaries of Altaic languages. Goals. The study aims at a comparative investigation of the lexeme балтырған ‘hogweed’. Results. The term proves a widespread phytonym in Bashkir discourse, which is attested by that it denotes a wide range of plant species in Bashkir and has parallels in other Turkic and Mongolic languages. The lexeme is included in academic, explanatory, dialectal, phrasal, and mythological dictionaries of the Bashkir language. The comparative analysis shows that baltyrγan ‘hogweed’ usually denotes a plant of the order Apiales, a medicinal herb. Baltyrγan~ baltirγana contains the initial bal / baltïr / baldïr with the meaning ‘green, young, fresh’.
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Dugnoille, Julien. "‘I heard a dog cry’: More-than-human interrelatedness, ethnicity and zootherapy in South Korean civil society discourse about dog meat consumption." Ethnography 20, no. 1 (October 10, 2017): 68–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1466138117735540.

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Korean diet is heavily based on meat. This is connected to a discursive tradition that associates the consumption of specific animal products with medicinal virtues. When justifying the use of nonhuman animals as curative commodities, Koreans often engage with ideologies about zootherapy, pure blood and ethnicity beyond the human world. Furthermore, alongside civil and state society discourse about South Korea’s ‘uniqueness’ as a nation (cf. concepts of jeong, uri, han, gi and Minjok literature), my participants also mobilized folk beliefs about care and necessary harm in the handling, treatment and processing of nonhuman animal bodies. Bringing together classic anthropological debates about primordial and instrumental ethnicity with a human geographical analysis of the shaping of East Asian post-industrial more-than-human landscapes, this paper examines civil society discourses about more-than-human interrelatedness, cultural uniqueness and bloodlines connected to dog meat consumption in South Korea.
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Gupta, Namrata. "Rationalizing gender inequality at scientific research organizations." Equality, Diversity and Inclusion: An International Journal 39, no. 6 (March 12, 2020): 689–706. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/edi-09-2018-0168.

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PurposeIt is well-known that women scientists are few in numbers in prestigious research organizations and still fewer in leadership positions. The purpose of this article is to analyze how organizational gender inequality is rationalized by scientists so as to highlight how discourse on equality reproduces gender at the workplace.Design/methodology/approachData was collected through semi-structured face-to-face interviews with the scientists in four research laboratories dealing with medicinal drugs and chemical substances. It uses discourse analysis by Foucault as a theoretical lens to examine how gender inequality is rationalized and the power relations behind it. It adopts the perspective that socio-cultural beliefs form the basis of gendered practices in organizations.FindingsIt finds that the scientists refuse to blame the organization for inequalities by delinking gender issues from the organizational domain. This delinking occurs through rationalizing gender inequality as “social”, through separating informal behavior from the “system” and perceiving women as “privileged”. Such discourses while keeping intact the rationality and meritocracy of the organizations/institutions, reproduce the ideological “public-private dichotomy” and the male dominance at the workplace.Practical implicationsThe findings indicate the need for extensive studies in India highlighting how gender is done in organizations, exploring men's role in undoing gender and government initiatives to create a climate of gender equality.Originality/valueIt highlights how discourse on gender equality/inequality at the workplace manifests dominance of men and represents an intersection of Indian social, organizational and institutional contexts at workplace. It also calls into question the applicability of the western concepts of “individualization” and “gender fatigue” to the Indian context.
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Craveri, Michela. "Retórica y organización del discurso en El ritual de los Bacabes." Estudios de Cultura Maya 57 (January 27, 2021): 179–213. http://dx.doi.org/10.19130/iifl.ecm.57.2021.18657.

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The aim of this paper is to study the rhetorical structure of the Ritual of the Bacabs, a colonial document of great importance in the context of Yucatec Maya literature. After a philological analysis, I will focus especially on the study of textual rhetoric and the marks of orality of this ritual document. I will also study the textual symbolism and networks of paronomasias, used to link diseases, body parts, animals and medicinal plants in the same healing action. The analysis of its rhetorical organization and the textual mechanisms of meaning production allows us to understand the functions of ritual language and the presence of a codified system of discourse. The basis of my theoretical approach is the convergence between rhetoric and semiotic study of discourse.
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Payum, Temin, Tahong Taggu, and Koj Taro. "Pharmacognostic study of Clerodendrum colebrookianum Walp. plant used for medicinal food by Adi tribe of Arunachal Pradesh, India." Archives of Agriculture and Environmental Science 5, no. 3 (September 25, 2020): 363–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.26832/24566632.2020.0503018.

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Clerodendrum colebrookianum Walp.is used as a medicinal food plant among tribal communities of Arunachal Pradesh, India. The shoot of the herb is used as vegetable as well as a medicine to control high blood pressure. This herb is one of the widely used and well-known medicinal food plants in North East India. The present study was carried out to discourse the Pharmacognostic characters of the Clerodendrum colebrookianum shoot. The anatomical discourse revealed up the main vascular bundle and lateral vascular bundle with well developed central pith, secondary xylem, and conspicuous endodermis with the outer surface covered by numerous multicellular trichomes. The fluorescence study of powder shows dull green to brownish in daylight and ash colour to dark brown under UV light. The plant sample contains total ash of 11.15%, the acid in-soluble ash is 1.7% and water-soluble ash is 8%. Methanol gave the highest extractive value with 12.56% while petroleum ether gave the lowest extract of 1.40%. Alkaloids, flavonoids, phenols, saponin, glycosides, carbohydrates, proteins and amino acids, fixed oils and fats were found positive but volatile oil was not recorded in all six different solvents used in the phytochemical screening. The present study characterises the diagnostic Pharmacognosy features of C. Colebrookianum, and would give useful data to differentiate the authentic drug sample from the adulterated sample.
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Springer, Lena. "Collectors, Producers, and Circulators of Tibetan and Chinese Medicines in Sichuan Province." Asian Medicine 10, no. 1-2 (October 3, 2015): 177–220. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15734218-12341357.

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The act of prescribing pharmaceutical drugs to patients is normally the site of judgements about the drug’s efficacy and safety. The success of treatments and the licences for commodities depend on the biochemical identity of the drugs and of their path and transformations inside the body. However, the ‘supply chain’ outside the body is eschewed by such discourse, and its importance for both pharmaceutical brands and physician-centred historiographies is ignored. As this ethnographic fieldwork on Tibetan and Chinese medicines in Sichuan shows, overlooked social actors ensure reliable knowledge about medicinal things and materials long before patients take their medicine. This paper takes a step back from the final products—clearly defined as ‘Tibetan’ or ‘Chinese’—and introduces those who produce and distribute them. Via observations of particular regimes of circulation and processing, the actions of collecting, manufacturing, transporting, and educating appear as the first and foremost acts of efficacy and safety.
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Wayland, Coral. "The failure of pharmaceuticals and the power of plants: medicinal discourse as a critique of modernity in the Amazon." Social Science & Medicine 58, no. 12 (June 2004): 2409–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2003.09.023.

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Cavalcante Saldanha, Dayanne, and Haroldo De Sá Medeiros. "MARIJUANA PURCHASE INTENTIONS ON A SCENARIO OF POSSIBLE LEGALIZATION IN BRAZIL." International Journal for Innovation Education and Research 8, no. 6 (June 1, 2020): 176–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.31686/ijier.vol8.iss6.2388.

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This article aims to evaluate the effects of the potential legalization of marijuana in the intention to purchase, in case of approval of Bill 7.270/2014, which authorizes the production and commercialization of marijuana derivatives in Brazil. The data from this exploratory research were collected from the application of two questionnaires, built in Google Docs. A total of 217 responses from non-marijuana users and 118 marijuana users. The data analysis method used was the content analysis with application of categorial analysis. The results indicated two categories of discourse and seven subcategories. One of the categories was denominated of Favor of the consumption, having the subcategories: public security; consumption already exists; government control; medicinal use; market, labor and tax. The other category was denominated against legalization with two subcategories: drug is always drug and government structure.
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Naria, Evi, and Lanova Dwi Arde. "Utilization of Plastic Bottle Waste as a Vertical Garden Media in the Dense Population Area of ​​Binjai Village, Binjai District, Binjai City." ABDIMAS TALENTA: Jurnal Pengabdian Kepada Masyarakat 5, no. 2 (December 2, 2020): 191–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.32734/abdimastalenta.v5i2.4726.

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One of the characteristics of a healthy environment is properly waste managed. Densely populated are areas where waste management needs to be improved. Plastic bottle is one type of waste that is widely available in densely populated areas. This waste, is difficult to decompose in the environment, and has not been managed optimally. The use of plastic bottle needs to be reduce the problem of waste, among others, it can be used as a vertical garden media. The methods are discourse, discussions, demonstrations, and practice how to create the plastic bottles make to vertical garden media. The participants are non-productive people, they are housewives. An important result of the activity is that the participants have the understand, skills and ability to make a vertical garden independently. Plastic bottle waste becomes useful, no longer becomes garbage. Plastic bottles are a growing media for vegetable and medicinal plants, that can beautify and green the environment in densely populated areas. It is hoped that participants will develop their potential in managing the environment starting from home, and sharing skills with the surrounding community.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Medicinal discourse"

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Hemmings, Diane. "The role of organisational discourse in the geneticisation of medicine:." Thesis, Cardiff University, 2006. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.490748.

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Organizational websites not only provide information but also have the potential to influence societal beliefs and values on contested issues. This study addresses how the rhetoric of two informational websites concerned with genetic testing for breast cancer contributes to the hegemony of geneticisation in medicine. The two sites analysed are CancerBACUP's Genetics from the United Kingdom and Cancer Facts. Genetic Testing for BRCA1 and BRCA2: It's Your Choice, sponsored by the National Cancer Institute in the United States, McGee's (1980) theory of ideographic analysis was chosen as the analytic framework for the study. Ideographs are ordinary language terms that function as the basic structural elements of an ideology. They are crafted in use according the goals and needs of the author and their meanings can be altered in concert with changing conditions within a society. An examination of ideographs offers insight into how organisations use language to encourage public adherence to the values and beliefs that benefit the organisation. Three ideographs commonly used in traditional medical communication, CHOICE, RESPONSIBILITY and PRIVACY, were identified in both websites. The analysis shows that CancerBACUP and the NCI alter the common understandings of these terms to normalize the changes brought about by genetics. CHOICE is reconfigured to limit expectations of genetic testing for breast cancer. The understanding of RESPONSIBILITY in health care is expanded to assume concern for the health of family and future generations and PRIVACY is no longer an individual matter but is seen in terms of the privacy of family. Reconstituting the traditional meanings of these ideographs to accommodate the needs of genetics in medicine allows the organizations to support the current hegemonic paradigm, thus appealing to influential stakeholders, while promoting the geneticisation of medicine in the public sphere
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Pitt, Susan. "Midwifery and medicine : discourses in childbirth, c. 1945-1974." Thesis, University of Wales Trinity Saint David, 1995. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.683128.

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Gordon, Alison. "(Re)constructing the discourse of disease women's magazines' mediation of medicine /." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp03/MQ39195.pdf.

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Wilson, Christopher C. "Paternal postpartum distress : a discourse analytic study." Thesis, University of Hull, 2008. http://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:5742.

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This portfolio thesis comprises of three parts: a systematic review paper, an empirical report and appendices. Part one is a systematic review in which the literature relating to the empirical paper is reviewed. Literature concerning the prevalence of paternal distress within the first year postpartum is addressed. The review attempts to determine levels of severity and aims to stipulate when distress is more prevalent within the year. The usefulness of such epidemiological data is also considered. Part two is an empirical paper examining the discourses around the postpartum father. The study aimed to conceptualise how the father's discursive position may limit the acceptability of distress in this period. The paper outlines popular competing constructions of postpartum fatherhood and paternal affect drawn from the accounts of first-time parents, midwives and health visitors. The impact of such discursive inconsistency on the recognition of this clinical issue is discussed. Clinical implications are then described. Part three comprises the appendices. A reflective summary drawing on the overall research process is included.
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Lemire, Diane M. "The body in Western and Chinese medicine : discourses and practices." Thesis, McGill University, 2000. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=33297.

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This thesis is about the body and about how medical discourses conceptualise the body in health and in illness. However, any inquisitiveness about the body is determined by historical, social and political environment that nurtures the discursive formations of knowledge. I focus particularly on the conceptualisation of the body in the two distinct medical traditions of Western and Chinese medicine. I examine Michel Foucault's analysis on the medical gaze and on the external technologies of power deployed on the body of the individual and on the social body. The knowledge generated from the medical gaze is articulated through a normalising and prescriptive discourse. The gaze of Chinese medicine that looks at the workings of the cosmos to define the truth about the body generates similar authoritative knowledge that targets the individual and the social body. However, this effect of power, although it never disappears entirely, undergoes significant transformations when it enters the arena of human activities and the potential for improvisation in the behaviour of the human actor. There is always a gap between the text and the practice.
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Morris, Craig M. ""Their power will be your pain" : an investigation into the discourses of medicinal cannabis users." Thesis, University of Greenwich, 2008. http://gala.gre.ac.uk/8212/.

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The discourses of medicinal cannabis users are the topic of this thesis, examined by way of qualitative in-depth interviews with thirty-two medicinal cannabis users. The thesis focuses on four main aims: how medicinal users talk about their use of cannabis (including looking at what discursive resources and rhetorical devices they use); the prevalence and significance of talking about 'nature' and the 'natural' within these discourses; the differences between the accounts of different participants; and the potential of different 'types' of discourse in relation to contestation around the use of this substance for medicinal benefit. A discourse analysis approach is used that draws mainly on the work of Wetherell and Potter (1992) and Fairclough (1995; 2001). A Bourdieusian theoretical framework is employed that draws on the key concepts of field, habitus, linguistic habitus, cultural and linguistic capital and trajectory (1979; 1992). The main findings are that whilst participants discuss a range of issues and use a range of rhetorical strategies and discursive resources in doing so, the majority of participants discursively construct cannabis in relation to ideas about nature, with cannabis frequently being articulated as 'natural' and therefore preferable to prescribed medicines, alcohol, other illicit drugs and 'chemical' / 'man-made' substances in ways that are strongly related to various notions of 'risk' (Beck, 1992). However, there is a great deal of difference between participants' discourses and these differences are underpinned by different educational and vocational trajectories, the unequal distribution of linguistic capital and differential dispositions when using language and engaging with knowledge, and are mediated by participants' different engagement with the issue of medicinal cannabis use. This emphasises the importance of an awareness of how social structuration continues to affect how individuals are capacitated and disposed to talk about and understand issues and to engage in contestation in contemporary society.
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MacDonald, Malcolm. "The social construction of medical discourse." Thesis, University of Warwick, 1994. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/3980/.

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The social construction of the discourse of medical institutions is analysed, drawing on both speech act and structural theories. Discourse is defined as a symbol system which has an ideological effect. This effect is linked to the maintenance of the interests of hegemonic social groups. Michel Foucault's archaeological method accords primacy to the relations which exist between institutional and social processes in the formation of discursive relations. Foucault's genealogical method also describes how the identity of the modern subject is constituted within the power nexus of coercive institutions. Medical discourse is paradigmatic of Basil Bernstein's model of pedagogic discourse. Pedagogic discourse is constructed according to the intrinsic grammar of the pedagogic device. This comprises distributive, recontextualizing and evaluative rules. These operate in three institutional contexts: the field of production, the field of reproduction and the recontextualizing field. M. A. K. Halliday's systemic linguistics defines three metafunctions of the text which operate in relation to its context of situation: the textual, ideational, and interpersonal. The textual characteristics of three principal modalities, or genres, of medical text are described in relation to their institutional contexts: the medical research report within the field of production, the medical interview within the field of reproduction and the medical textbook within the recontextualizing field. As a medical text shifts from the field of production to the recontextualizing field, certain transformations take place in the ideational options of tense, transitivity and process and the interpersonal options of modality. These syntactic transformations, organized by codes of the pedagogic device, symbolically authorize the recontextualized medical text.
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Knight, Denise Ann. "Patients and their use of medicines : a discourse analysis of encounters with nurse prescribers." Thesis, University of Hertfordshire, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/2299/17191.

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Patients' use of medicines is widely recognised as sub-optimal with a high proportion of patients with a long-term condition not taking their medicines as prescribed. Research and policy guidance emphasise the importance of partnership within the patient-prescriber encounter in enhancing patients' use of medicines. There is however considerable evidence that this is not usually achieved by medical prescribers, limiting the extent to which shared decision-making occurs about prescribed medicines. There is a general assumption that nurse prescribers, who within the United Kingdom have comparable prescribing rights to medical doctors, demonstrate greater abilities in collaborative working with patients leading to an enhanced use of medicines. Research evidence is however limited, particularly in relation to the ways in which patients' use of medicines is discussed and negotiated within the patient-nurse prescriber encounter. This study focused on the management of patients' use of medicines within the patient-nurse prescriber encounter. Seven nurse prescribers, working within a number of clinical specialities in both primary and secondary care settings, were recruited to the study together with their patients who were living with one or more long-term conditions (n=21). Data collection involved the non-participant observation of out-patient consultations to examine the management of patients' use of medicines within the encounter and semi-structured interviews with both patients and prescribers. Discourse analysis was undertaken to examine underpinning assumptions, views and beliefs regarding the management of patients' use of medicines. Asymmetry was evident within the encounters with prescribers controlling the agenda for discussion and interrupting patients' attempts to demonstrate their knowledge. Patient accounts of the moral approach adopted in managing their condition in the context of their everyday lives were also ignored. Biomedical and contrasting moral discourses are examined. An interpretive framework derived from the work of Michel Foucault is used to explain the operation of disciplinary, pastoral and bio-political power within the encounter and the extent to which subjugation of patients' knowledge and resistance were evident. Foucault's concept of technologies of the self is examined to explore its potential application in enhancing patients' medicines use.
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Compion, Sara. "Tuberculosis discourse in South Africa a case study /." Pretoria : [s.n.], 2007. http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-08222008-110053.

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Bowen, William Michael. "The Americanization of Chinese medicine a discourse-based study of culture-driven medical change /." online access from Digital Dissertation Consortium access full-text, 1993. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/32660695.html.

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Books on the topic "Medicinal discourse"

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Chenail, Ronald J. Medical discourse and systemic frames of comprehension. Norwood, N.J: Ablex Pub. Corp., 1991.

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Groningen Conference on Medical and Political Discourse (1985). Discourse analysis and public life: Papers of the Groningen Conference on Medical and Political Discourse. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Foris Publications, 1986.

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Sukarni, Emalia Iragiliati. Utterance patterns and politeness strategies in Indonesian medical discourse: Dissertation. [Malang]: State University of Malang, Graduate Program in English Language Education, 2005.

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Internet discourse and health debates. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005.

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Ghazi, Joseph. Vocabulaire du discours médical: Structure, fonctionnement, apprentissage. Paris: Didier érudition, 1985.

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Ngoma: Discourses of healing in central and southern Africa. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992.

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Hora, Thomas. Beyond the dream: Discourses on metapsychiatry and spiritual guidance. Orange, Calif: PAGL Press, 1986.

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Prescription TV: Therapeutic discourse in the hospital and at home. Durham: Duke University Press, 2012.

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Understanding patients' voices: A multi-method approach to health discourse. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2015.

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Pak, Yu-jŏng. Interaction between doctors & patients in Korean primary care settings: Analyzing medical discourse. Seoul: Pagijong Press, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Medicinal discourse"

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Angelelli, Claudia V. "Medicine." In The Handbook of Intercultural Discourse and Communication, 430–48. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118247273.ch21.

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Amzat, Jimoh, and Oliver Razum. "Traditional Medicine in Africa." In Towards a Sociology of Health Discourse in Africa, 79–91. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61672-8_6.

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Nelson, Holly Faith, and Sharon Alker. "Conway: Dis/ability, Medicine, and Metaphysics." In The New Science and Women’s Literary Discourse, 65–83. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230118430_5.

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Atkinson, Paul. "Discourse, Descriptions and Diagnoses: Reproducing Normal Medicine." In Biomedicine Examined, 179–204. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-2725-4_8.

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Good, Mary-Jo DelVecchio. "Discourses on Physician Competence." In Physicians of Western Medicine, 247–67. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-6430-3_10.

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Ordóñez-López, Pilar, and Nuria Edo-Marzá. "1. Medical Discourse: Building Bridges between Medicine and Society." In Medical Discourse in Professional, Academic and Popular Settings, edited by Pilar Ordóñez-López and Nuria Edo-Marzá, 1–8. Bristol, Blue Ridge Summit: Multilingual Matters, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.21832/9781783096268-002.

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Ncube, Caroline B. "South Africa's Three Decades of Access to Medicine Discourse." In Intellectual Property Law and Access to Medicines, 235–51. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003176602-15.

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Plows, Alexandra, and Michael Reinsborough. "Nanobiotechnology and Ethics: Converging Civil Society Discourses." In Philosophy and Medicine, 133–56. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-8649-6_9.

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Good, Mary-Jo DelVecchio. "The Practice of Biomedicine and the Discourse on Hope." In Anthropologies of Medicine, 121–35. Wiesbaden: Vieweg+Teubner Verlag, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-322-87859-5_10.

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Wells, Susan, and Nathan Stormer. "Historical Work in the Discourses of Health and Medicine." In Methodologies for the Rhetoric of Health & Medicine, 24–40. New York : Routledge / Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315303758-2.

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Conference papers on the topic "Medicinal discourse"

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Golubykh, Anastasiya. "Functional Characteristics Of Concept Medicine In The English Educational Discourse." In Philological Readings. European Publisher, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2020.04.02.75.

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Chen, Yuanfang, Yu Chen, Tao Yu, Zhaohui Liang, and Song Wei. "Theory and practice: A discourse-based translation strategy of Chinese Medicine." In 2012 IEEE International Conference on Bioinformatics and Biomedicine Workshops (BIBMW). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/bibmw.2012.6470321.

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Liu, Xiuling. "The Meta-pragmatic Functions of English Discourse Markers." In 2016 7th International Conference on Education, Management, Computer and Medicine (EMCM 2016). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/emcm-16.2017.248.

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Wang, Yue-Li. "Prospects of Applying Pervasive Computing to the Construction of Network Interactive Modality in Foreign Language Classroom Discourse." In 2016 8th International Conference on Information Technology in Medicine and Education (ITME). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/itme.2016.0157.

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Power, S., K. O’Donoghue, and S. Meaney. "RF29 Critical discourse analysis on the influence of media commentary on fatal fetal abnormality in ireland." In Society for Social Medicine 62nd Annual Scientific Meeting, Hosted by the MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, 5–7 September 2018. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2018-ssmabstracts.117.

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Shiplo, S., K. O’Donoghue, and S. Meaney. "P82 Critical discourse analysis of the joint committee meetings on the eighth amendment of the constitution of ireland." In Society for Social Medicine and Population Health and International Epidemiology Association European Congress Annual Scientific Meeting 2019, Hosted by the Society for Social Medicine & Population Health and International Epidemiology Association (IEA), School of Public Health, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland, 4–6 September 2019. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2019-ssmabstracts.233.

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Hilton, S., C. Buckton, and G. Fergie. "OP5 #Exploring industry influence across alcohol and sugar pricing policies in the UK: a discourse network analysis." In Society for Social Medicine 62nd Annual Scientific Meeting, Hosted by the MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, 5–7 September 2018. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2018-ssmabstracts.5.

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Penney, TL, J. Adams, and M. White. "LB4 Industry reactions to the UK soft drinks industry levy: unpacking the evolving discourse from announcement to implementation." In Society for Social Medicine 62nd Annual Scientific Meeting, Hosted by the MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, 5–7 September 2018. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2018-ssmabstracts.88.

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Barlow, P., and AM Thow. "OP33 Free trade agreements, power asymmetries, and the design of nutrition policies: a critical discourse analysis of challenges to nutrition labelling regulations at the world trade organization, 2007–2018." In Society for Social Medicine and Population Health Annual Scientific Meeting 2020, Hosted online by the Society for Social Medicine & Population Health and University of Cambridge Public Health, 9–11 September 2020. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2020-ssmabstracts.33.

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Buckton, CH, G. Fergie, P. Leifeld, and S. Hilton. "OP08 A discourse network analysis of UK newspaper coverage of the ‘sugar tax’ debate before and after the announcement of the soft drinks industry levy." In Society for Social Medicine and Population Health and International Epidemiology Association European Congress Annual Scientific Meeting 2019, Hosted by the Society for Social Medicine & Population Health and International Epidemiology Association (IEA), School of Public Health, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland, 4–6 September 2019. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2019-ssmabstracts.8.

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