The Language and Portrayal of Compassion in National Health Service Hospital Advertising

Abstract This paper explores the portrayal of compassion in NHS hospital advertising in the United Kingdom. Compassion is commonly defined as being sensitive to the suffering of others and showing a commitment to relieve it. Unacceptable reports of malpractice and patient neglect in recent press cov...

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Main Author: Frenay, Clare
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
English
English
English
Published: 2014
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27074/
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author Frenay, Clare
author_facet Frenay, Clare
author_sort Frenay, Clare
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Abstract This paper explores the portrayal of compassion in NHS hospital advertising in the United Kingdom. Compassion is commonly defined as being sensitive to the suffering of others and showing a commitment to relieve it. Unacceptable reports of malpractice and patient neglect in recent press coverage have undermined the image of care staff being compassionate. Little has been researched about how this empathic mentality is increasingly demonstrated in on-site advertising displays and in the context of contemporary Government policy and guidelines for healthcare practice. The study entails a content and semiotic analysis of signage and poster publications in the built environments of two comparable large NHS hospitals in the Midlands during Autumn 2013. The content analysis samples feature 190 publications in each hospital which are further divided into groups. The semiotic analysis was conducted on theoretical samples of the original data set (9 publications in the established hospital and 20 in the new-build). Four main themes emerged from the data: (a) the opportunistic use of advertising to convey �compassionate� environments in the service provisions; (b) the portrayal of advanced nursing practitioners to emphasise the professional status of nursing; (c) the portrayal of idealistic care practices either to positively endorse caring or unduly raise expectation of quality and performance; (d) the significant presence of compassion-themed publications in the new Foundation Trust hospital. The study demonstrates the potential for hospital advertising to account for, promote and transform desirable visions of care in a rapidly changing health system.
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spelling nottingham-270742022-03-21T16:11:37Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27074/ The Language and Portrayal of Compassion in National Health Service Hospital Advertising Frenay, Clare Abstract This paper explores the portrayal of compassion in NHS hospital advertising in the United Kingdom. Compassion is commonly defined as being sensitive to the suffering of others and showing a commitment to relieve it. Unacceptable reports of malpractice and patient neglect in recent press coverage have undermined the image of care staff being compassionate. Little has been researched about how this empathic mentality is increasingly demonstrated in on-site advertising displays and in the context of contemporary Government policy and guidelines for healthcare practice. The study entails a content and semiotic analysis of signage and poster publications in the built environments of two comparable large NHS hospitals in the Midlands during Autumn 2013. The content analysis samples feature 190 publications in each hospital which are further divided into groups. The semiotic analysis was conducted on theoretical samples of the original data set (9 publications in the established hospital and 20 in the new-build). Four main themes emerged from the data: (a) the opportunistic use of advertising to convey �compassionate� environments in the service provisions; (b) the portrayal of advanced nursing practitioners to emphasise the professional status of nursing; (c) the portrayal of idealistic care practices either to positively endorse caring or unduly raise expectation of quality and performance; (d) the significant presence of compassion-themed publications in the new Foundation Trust hospital. The study demonstrates the potential for hospital advertising to account for, promote and transform desirable visions of care in a rapidly changing health system. 2014-06 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27074/1/dissertation_cf1.pdf application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27074/2/dissertation_cf2.pdf application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27074/3/dissertation_cf3.pdf application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27074/4/dissertation_cf4.pdf Frenay, Clare (2014) The Language and Portrayal of Compassion in National Health Service Hospital Advertising. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished)
spellingShingle Frenay, Clare
The Language and Portrayal of Compassion in National Health Service Hospital Advertising
title The Language and Portrayal of Compassion in National Health Service Hospital Advertising
title_full The Language and Portrayal of Compassion in National Health Service Hospital Advertising
title_fullStr The Language and Portrayal of Compassion in National Health Service Hospital Advertising
title_full_unstemmed The Language and Portrayal of Compassion in National Health Service Hospital Advertising
title_short The Language and Portrayal of Compassion in National Health Service Hospital Advertising
title_sort language and portrayal of compassion in national health service hospital advertising
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27074/