Dr. Laura Blount Carper is an assistant professor at Texas A&M at Texarkana. She received her Ph.D. in Communication Studies with a focus in health communication from Louisiana State University in the Spring of 2021. She has a passion for working with individuals that are living in poverty, and enrolled in the SNAP program. She is the published author of 'Stigma and Social Support on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program' with Lexington books. Additionally, she has presented as a top paper finalist at the international risk and crisis conferences on vaccines and the Social Amplification of Risk Framework. Through her research she has focused on topics such as stigma, social support, and narratives in a variety of health communication contexts. She has also presented and chaired many panels at the National Communication Association. Since 2017, she has instructed undergraduate and graduate students at Louisiana State University, Louisiana Tech University, and most recently at Texas A&M University-Texarkana.
""Innovative Approaches to Narratives in Health Communication"" represents a valuable contribution to the existing literature for both researchers and those responsible for creating and implementing health communication campaigns. Across its 3 sections and 10 chapters, the volume demonstrates the many ways in which narratives can be a powerful tool for understanding and communicating health issues in a number of specific contexts. It incorporates contributions from a variety of scholars, each approaching the topic from different perspectives and viewing various aspects of health communication phenomena through different lenses. Some of the aspects that set this book apart from others are its distinguishing between testimonials and other forms of narratives and its advocacy for the strategic use of testimonial narratives both in health campaigns and in future research. The book persuasively makes the case that testimonial narratives allow the listener to view the world from another person's perspective. This perspective shift is powerful, insightful, persuasive, and, as the editor and contributors point out, empowering. I believe that through its comprehensive, theoretically-grounded approach and focus on applications, this book possesses the power to positively impact health communication research moving forward and, perhaps more importantly, to empower and educate people-potentially leading to positive impacts on large numbers of people around the world. Dr. Christopher Deal Department of Communication & Media Studies Louisiana Tech University