Search

Showing total 768 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Topic interviewing Remove constraint Topic: interviewing Region united kingdom Remove constraint Region: united kingdom Publisher wiley-blackwell Remove constraint Publisher: wiley-blackwell
768 results

Search Results

1. Attributes of communication aids as described by those supporting children and young people with AAC.

2. Fluctuating salience in those living with genetic risk of motor neuron disease: A qualitative interview study.

3. Lessons learnt from facilitating care home placements for counselling and psychotherapy students during the COVID‐19 pandemic.

4. A qualitative exploration of speech–language pathologists' approaches in treating spoken discourse post‐traumatic brain injury.

5. 'It's the way they look at you': Why discrimination towards young parents is a policy and practice issue.

6. Negotiating social belonging: A case study of second‐generation Kurds in London.

7. Co‐designing a theory‐informed, multicomponent intervention to increase vaccine uptake with Congolese migrants: A qualitative, community‐based participatory research study (LISOLO MALAMU).

8. Experiences and views of people who frequently call emergency ambulance services: A qualitative study of UK service users.

9. Menopause at work—An organisation‐based case study.

10. 'In practice it can be so much harder': Young people's approaches and experiences of supporting friends experiencing domestic abuse.

11. Nothing about us without us: A co‐production strategy for communities, researchers and stakeholders to identify ways of improving health and reducing inequalities.

12. Diagnostic procedures of paediatric speech and language therapists in the UK: Enabling and obstructive factors.

13. A qualitative exploration of the strategies used by patients and nurses when navigating a standardised care programme.

14. The impacts and implications of the community face mask use during the Covid‐19 pandemic: A qualitative narrative interview study.

15. Growing up with disabled parents who use personal assistance (PA support): children's views and experiences.

16. 'Wishes and feelings': Misunderstandings and missed opportunities for participation in child protection proceedings.

17. The interactive dimensions of encounters in HIV care: From trauma to relational traumatic growth.

18. Conducting large‐scale mixed‐method research on harm and abuse prevention with children under 12: Learning from a UK feasibility study.

19. Evaluation of a pilot to introduce simulated learning activities to support speech and language therapy students' clinical development.

20. Ensuring treatment fidelity in intervention studies: Developing a checklist and scoring system within a behaviour change paradigm.

21. Autism and bilingualism: A thematic analysis of practitioner perspectives in the United Kingdom.

22. Practicalities of promoting practice‐based learning in end of life care for care home staff: Lessons from "online" supportive conversations and reflection sessions.

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

24. Patient experience data as enacted: Sociomaterial perspectives and 'singular‐multiples' in health care quality improvement research.

25. Materialities and imaginaries of home: Geographies of British returnees in later life.

26. Pollution, peril and poverty: a British study of the stigmatization of smokers.

27. Autistic adults' views of their communication skills and needs.

28. Exploring the obesity concerns of British Pakistani women living in deprived inner‐city areas: A qualitative study.

29. Reflecting Team Practices outside the therapy room: A thematic analysis of a Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS) away‐day process with a team undergoing change.

30. 'Love makes me feel good inside and my heart is fixed': What adults with intellectual disabilities have to say about love and relationships.

31. Staff experiences of using non‐violent resistance in a residential care home for young people with high‐risk behaviours.

32. Speak out, stay safe: Including children with special educational needs and disabilities in an evaluation of an abuse prevention programme.

33. Discharged from paediatric intensive care: A mixed methods study of teenager's anxiety levels and experiences after paediatric intensive care unit discharge.

34. Women's experiences of restrictive interventions within inpatient mental health services: A qualitative investigation.

35. The role of music within the home‐lives of young people with profound and multiple learning disabilities: Parental perspectives.

36. Key stakeholder perspectives on primary care for young people with an eating disorder: A qualitative study.

37. The impact of books on social inclusion and development and well‐being among children and young people with severe and profound learning disabilities: Recognising the unrecognised cohort.

38. Creating a person-centred culture within the North East Autism Society: preliminary findings.

39. Time to change? Exploring the impact of time-limited service provision in a family support service.

40. Supported internships as a vehicle for social inclusion.

41. Autopsy of a failed trial part 1: A qualitative investigation of clinician's views on and experiences of the implementation of the DAISIES trial in UK‐based intensive eating disorder services.

42. Visually impaired people with learning difficulties: their education from 1900 to 1970 – policy, practice and experience.

43. Imagining genomic medicine futures in primary care: General practitioners' views on mainstreaming genomics in the National Health Service.

44. Young adults' dynamic relationships with their families in early psychosis: Identifying relational strengths and supporting relational agency.

45. Health information work and the enactment of care in couples and families affected by Multiple Sclerosis.

46. Habermasian communication pathologies in do‐not‐resuscitate discussions at the end of life: manipulation as an unintended consequence of an ideology of patient autonomy.

47. Making a target work: Messages from a pilot of the 6‐month time limit on care proceedings in England.

48. A divergence of opinion: how those involved in child and family social work are responding to the challenges of the Internet and social media.

49. Work and resilience: Care leavers' experiences of navigating towards employment and independence.

50. Learning in lockdown: Using the COVID‐19 crisis to teach children about food and climate change.