128 results on '"Zayts, Olga"'
Search Results
2. Leadership and Culture: When Stereotypes Meet Actual Workplace Practice
3. Mental health of new and recent graduates during the university-to-work transition: a scoping review protocol
4. Challenging hegemonic femininities? The discourse of trailing spouses in Hong Kong
5. Interpreter-mediated dentistry
6. Be(com)ing a Leader: A Case Study of Co-Constructing Professional Identities at Work
7. ‘you have to be adaptable, obviously’
8. “It's Just a Likelihood”: Uncertainty as Topic and Resource in Conveying “Positive” Results in an Antenatal Screening Clinic
9. GeneticCounselling
10. Chapter 5. Epistemic “Struggles”
11. Language and Culture at Work
12. 5. Laughter as a “serious business”: Clients’ laughter in prenatal screening for Down’s syndrome
13. Interactional difficulties as a resource for patient participation in prenatal screening consultations in Hong Kong
14. The mental health of university graduates during the university-to-work transition: A scoping review protocol
15. Migrant doctors' narratives about patients: A study of professional identity in Chile and Hong Kong.
16. A sociolinguistic investigation of professional mobility and multicultural healthcare communication
17. Migrant doctors’ narratives about patients
18. Advice, authority and autonomy in shared decision-making in antenatal screening: the importance of context
19. Genetic Counseling/Consultation in South-East Asia: A Report from the Workshop at the 10th Asia Pacific Conference on Human Genetics
20. “Pragmatics is the Way of the Future”: An interview with Neal Norrick
21. ‘It’s not acceptable for the husband to stay at home’.:Taking a discourse analytical approach to capture the gendering of work
22. ‘Let's have it Tested First’: Choice and Circumstances in Decision-Making Following Positive Antenatal Screening in Hong Kong
23. Chapter 9. ‘You may know better than I do’: Negotiating advice-giving in Down Syndrome screening in a Hong Kong prenatal hospital
24. ‘Letʼs have it tested first’: choice and circumstances in decision-making following positive antenatal screening in Hong Kong
25. Advanced informatics understanding of clinician-patient communication: A mixed-method approach to oral health literacy talk in interpreter-mediated pediatric dentistry
26. Narratives of Vicarious Experience in Professional and Workplace contexts: Introduction to the special issue
27. ‘It's not acceptable for the husband to stay at home': Taking a discourse analytical approach to capture the gendering of work
28. The different facets of “culture” in genetic counseling: A situated analysis of genetic counseling in Hong Kong
29. The power of suggestion: examining the impact of presence or absence of shared first language in the antenatal clinic
30. Laughter as a 'serious business' : clients’ laughter in prenatal screening for Down’s syndrome
31. 'It's not acceptable for the husband to stay at home': Taking a discourse analytical approach to capture the gendering of work.
32. Exploring face, identity and relationship management in disagreements in business meetings in Hong Kong
33. Commodification and marketisation of genetic testing through online direct-to-consumer platforms in Hong Kong
34. The management of diagnostic uncertainty and decision-making in genetics case conferences
35. Impact of Prominent Themes in Clinician-Patient Conversations on Caregiver’s Perceived Quality of Communication with Paediatric Dental Visits
36. Directive-giving and grammatical forms
37. Advice, authority and autonomy in shared decision-making in antenatal screening: the importance of context
38. Positioning oneself in relation to larger collectivities in expatriates’ workplace narratives
39. Be(com)ing a leader
40. Genetic counseling in multicultural and multilingual contexts
41. More than ‘information provider’ and ‘counselor’: Constructing and negotiating roles and identities of nurses in genetic counseling sessions
42. ‘I don’t want to see my children suffer after birth’: the ‘risk of knowing’ talk and decision-making in prenatal screening for Down’s syndrome in Hong Kong
43. “I can't remember them ever not doing whatI tell them!”: Negotiating face and power relations in ‘upward’ refusals in multicultural workplaces in Hong Kong
44. Modes of risk explanation in telephone consultations between nurses and parents for a genetic condition
45. “[She] said: ‘take the test’ and I took the test”. Relational work as a framework to approach directiveness in prenatal screening of Chinese clients in Hong Kong
46. The management of diagnostic uncertainty and decision-making in genetics case conferences.
47. Directive-giving and grammatical forms.
48. ‘Let’s have it tested first’: choice and circumstances in decision‐making following positive antenatal screening in Hong Kong
49. Laughter as Medical Providers' Resource: Negotiating Informed Choice in Prenatal Genetic Counseling
50. Communication in healthcare settings
Catalog
Books, media, physical & digital resources
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.