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  1. Games, civil war and mutiny: metaphors of conflict for the nurse–doctor relationship in medical television programmes.Roslyn Weaver - 2013 - Nursing Inquiry 20 (4):280-292.
    Metaphors of medicine are common, such as war, which is evident in much of our language about health‐care where patients and healthcare professionals fight disease, or the game, which is one way to frame the nurse–doctor professional relationship. This study analyses six pilot episodes of American (Grey's Anatomy, Hawthorne, Mercy, Nurse Jackie) and Australian (All Saints, RAN) medical television programmes premiering between 1998 and 2009 to assess one way that our contemporary culture understands and constructs professional relationships between nurses and (...)
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  • The Dead Parrot and the Dying Swan: The Role of Metaphor Scenarios in UK Press Coverage of Avian Flu in the UK in 2005–2006.Nelya Koteyko, Brian Brown & Paul Crawford - 2008 - Metaphor and Symbol 23 (4):242-261.
    This article takes two events in the ongoing story of a predicted UK avian flu epidemic—“the dead parrot” (October 2005) and “the dying swan” (April 2006)—and examines the role and use of three interconnected metaphor scenarios (related to the notions of “journey,” “war,” and “house”) in the UK press coverage about avian influenza in 2005 and 2006. These represent fundamental descriptive and explanatory structures that derive from culturally or phenomenologically salient objects or experiences, and which allow journalists, scientists, and policymakers (...)
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  • Public Discourse and Public Policy: Some Ways That Metaphor Constrains Health (Care). [REVIEW]Judy Z. Segal - 1997 - Journal of Medical Humanities 18 (4):217-231.
    Since the terms of the health policy debate in the United States and Canada are largely supplied by biomedicine, the current “crisis” in health care is, in part, a product of biomedical rhetoric. In this essay, three metaphors widely identified as being associated with biomedicine—the body is a machine, medicine is war,and medicine is a business—are examined with a view to the ways in which they influence the health policy debate, not only with respect to outcomes, but also with respect (...)
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  • Contesting Death, Speaking of Dying.Judy Z. Segal - 2000 - Journal of Medical Humanities 21 (1):29-44.