Ellis (Nelson R. Mandela Medical School, Durban) is a general practitioner in KwaZulu-Natal, and a facilitator of cross-cultural communication workshops. In this new text, he expands on themes covered in his 1999 publication, Learning Language and Communication in the Medical Consultation. Using Zulu as an example, the text demonstrates an approach for healthcare practitioners to learn an African language through their daily contact with patients (with the aid of a native-speaking helper/nurse/interpreter). Using the gastrointestinal tract as a model, Ellis guides healthcare workers on how to write and record their own language-learning course, and to approach language- and culture-learning from the context in which they find themselves immersed. Distributed in the US by ISBS. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
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This book is filled with useful and practical language learning strategies designed to help doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers to learn an African language through their daily contact with patients in Africa. More than this, it gives advice on ways to reach some understanding of the culture, health beliefs and world views of the patient in a medical consultation. Although English/Zulu and the Zulu medical culture are used as the examples, the underlying themes are applicable to any culture. The book has retained the humor and wit of its predecessor, Learning Language and Culture in the Medical Consultation, but it has been considerably revised and expanded to include more material on the cross-cultural consultation and the AIDS pandemic, as well as appendices of vocabulary and "survival phrases" designed to facilitate communication and understanding in a medical context.
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