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38 results

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1. Older people's views on loneliness during COVID-19 lockdowns.

2. New insights on rural doctors' clinical courage in the context of the unfolding COVID-19 pandemic.

3. 'It absolutely needs to move out of that structure': Māori with bipolar disorder identify structural barriers and propose solutions to reform the New Zealand mental health system.

4. What do we know about the intersection of being blind and being Māori in Aotearoa New Zealand? Taking an applied community psychology approach to a systematic review of the published literature.

5. Online proctored exams and digital inequalities during the pandemic.

6. Using vignettes about racism from health practice in Aotearoa to generate anti‐racism interventions.

7. The whitewashing of contracts: Unpacking the discourse within Māori health provider contracts in Aotearoa/New Zealand.

8. Shame and recognition: Social work practice with vulnerable young people.

9. Bearing witness: straight students talk about homophobia at school.

10. Designing Effective Digital Advertisements to Prevent Online Consumption of Child Sexual Exploitation Material.

11. Why people choose to participate in psychotherapy for depression: A qualitative study.

12. Patient‐centred care training needs of health care assistants who provide care for people with dementia.

13. Lonely ageing in a foreign land: Social isolation and loneliness among older Asian migrants in New Zealand.

14. "I don't think we've quite got there yet": The experience of allyship for mental health consumer researchers.

15. Turning the Tables: Power Relations Between Consumer Researchers and Other Mental Health Researchers.

16. Pursuing security: economic resources and the ontological security of older New Zealanders.

17. 'Build a friendship with them': The discourse of 'at-risk' as a barrier to relationship building between young people who trade sex and social workers.

18. Exercise to Support Indigenous Pregnant Women to Stop Smoking: Acceptability to Māori.

19. Missed nursing care as an 'art form': The contradictions of nurses as carers.

20. 'It depends on the consultation': revisiting use of family members as interpreters for general practice consultations - when and why?

21. Realising the rhetoric: refreshing public health providers’ efforts to honour Te Tiriti o Waitangi in New Zealand.

22. Declining oral intake towards the end of life: how to talk about it? A qualitative study.

23. “I’m taking control”: how people living with HIV/AIDS manage stigma in health interactions.

24. The work of negotiating HIV as a chronic condition: a qualitative analysis.

25. Prevention-enhancing interactions: a Critical Interpretive Synthesis of the evidence about children who sexually abuse other children.

26. The role of key workers in supporting people with intellectual disability in the self-management of their diabetes: a qualitative New Zealand study.

27. Weighing it up: family maintenance discourses in NGO child protection decision-making in Aotearoa/ New Zealand.

28. The well-being of children of parents with a mental illness: the responsiveness of crisis mental health services in Wellington, New Zealand.

29. Email interviewing: generating data with a vulnerable population.

30. Finding Meaningful Support: Young People's Experiences of “Risky” Environments.

31. Young people’s search for agency: Making sense of their experiences and taking control.

32. Experiencing patient death in clinical practice: Nurses’ recollections of their earliest memorable patient death.

33. From EN to BN to RN: An exploration and analysis of the literature.

34. Working in partnership with parents: the experience and challenge of practice innovation in child and family health nursing.

35. Bioethical Issues and Health Care Chaplaincy in Aotearoa New Zealand.

36. WHAKAPAPA, GENEALOGY AND GENETICS.

37. The experiences of women (65-74 years) living with a long-term condition in the shadow of ageing.

38. General Practitioners, specialists and surveillance guidelines: Interpreting the socio-clinical context of decision-making.