Search

Showing total 17 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Publication Year Range This year Remove constraint Publication Year Range: This year Journal sociology of health & illness Remove constraint Journal: sociology of health & illness Publisher wiley-blackwell Remove constraint Publisher: wiley-blackwell
17 results

Search Results

1. The challenges of coeliac disease at work: A contestation of the politics of inclusion.

2. Reframing the public/private debate on healthcare services: Tracking boundaries in the National Health Service.

3. A third indeterminacy of labour power: Worker health investment and the indeterminacy of labour health.

4. The historical sociology of medicine in India: Introduction to the special section.

5. Negotiating pace, focus and identities: Patient/public involvement/engagement in a palliative care study.

6. Proposing a new history of grief’s medicalisation: A critical discourse analysis.

7. 'Planning for a healthy baby and a healthy pregnancy': A critical analysis of Canadian clinical practice guidelines for the treatment of opioid dependence during pregnancy.

8. The social value of place‐based creative wellbeing: A rapid review and evidence synthesis.

9. Chronic illness as cultural disruption: The impact of chronic illness on religious and cultural practice.

10. COVID companions: Exploring pets as social support.

11. Risk ambassadors and saviours: Children and futuring public health interventions.

12. Regulating diagnosis—Molecular and regulatory sub‐stratifications of lung cancer treatment.

13. Decision‐making as discovery: Vetting clinical research in a leading precision oncology service.

14. Journey for a cure: Illness narratives of obstetric fistula survivors in North Central Nigeria.

15. Taking after a parent: Phenotypic resemblance and the professional familialisation of genomics.

16. The intensification of parenting and generational fracturing of spontaneous physical activity from childhood play in the United Kingdom.

17. Caring through things at a distance: Intimacy and presence in teletherapy assemblages.