All Stories

  1. Hope, burden or risk: a discourse analytic study of the construction and experience of fertility preservation in the context of cancer
  2. Infertility-Related Distress Following Cancer for Women and Men: A Mixed Method Study
  3. Systematic review of fertility-related psychological distress in cancer patients: Informing on an improved model of care
  4. Childhood trauma and anorexia nervosa: from body image to embodiment
  5. Women’s Constructions of Childhood Trauma and Anorexia Nervosa: a Qualitative Meta-Synthesis
  6. Sexual Rehabilitation After Prostate Cancer Through Assistive Aids: A Comparison of Gay/Bisexual and Heterosexual Men
  7. Experiences of Sexual Rehabilitation after Prostate Cancer: A Comparison of Gay and Bisexual Men with Heterosexual Men
  8. Threat to Gay Identity and Sexual Relationships: The Consequences of Prostate Cancer Treatment for Gay and Bisexual Men
  9. “If You Don’t Have a Baby, You Can’t Be in Our Culture”: Migrant and Refugee Women’s Experiences and Constructions of Fertility and Fertility Control
  10. Childhood trauma and anorexia nervosa: From body image to embodiment
  11. The transgender parent: Experiences and constructions of pregnancy and parenthood for transgender men in Australia
  12. Need for information, honesty and respect: patient perspectives on health care professionals communication about cancer and fertility
  13. Critical Discourse/Discourse Analysis
  14. Being a mother with multiple sclerosis: Negotiating cultural ideals of mother and child
  15. “Is it menopause or bipolar?”: a qualitative study of the experience of menopause for women with bipolar disorder
  16. Clinician provision of oncofertility support in cancer patients of a reproductive age: A systematic review
  17. ‘It’s one of those “It’ll never happen to me” things’: young women’s constructions of smoking and risk
  18. Menopause and illness course in bipolar disorder: A systematic review
  19. A Systematic Review of Patient Oncofertility Support Needs in Reproductive Cancer Patients aged 14 to 45 years of age
  20. Regulation and Resistance: Negotiation of Premarital Sexuality in the Context of Migrant and Refugee Women
  21. “In My Culture, We Don’t Know Anything About That”: Sexual and Reproductive Health of Migrant and Refugee Women
  22. Challenges in the Provision of Sexual and Reproductive Health Care to Refugee and Migrant Women: A Q Methodological Study of Health Professional Perspectives
  23. Experiencing menopause in the context of cancer: Women’s constructions of gendered subjectivities
  24. Evaluation of the relative efficacy of a couple cognitive-behaviour therapy (CBT) for Premenstrual Disorders (PMDs), in comparison to one-to-one CBT and a wait list control: A randomized controlled trial
  25. Doing and undoing femininities: An intersectional analysis of young women’s smoking
  26. Unraveling the Mystery of “The Specificity of Women’s Sexual Response and Its Relationship with Sexual Orientations”: The Social Construction of Sex and Sexual Identities
  27. Negotiating Discourses of Shame, Secrecy, and Silence: Migrant and Refugee Women’s Experiences of Sexual Embodiment
  28. The Medical Body: Women's Experiences of Sexual Embodiment Across the Cancer Illness Trajectory
  29. Women’s constructions of heterosex and sexual embodiment after cancer
  30. Experiences and Constructions of Menarche and Menstruation Among Migrant and Refugee Women
  31. Just Desserts? Exploring Constructions of Food in Women’s Experiences of Bulimia
  32. Mastery, Isolation, or Acceptance: Gay and Bisexual Men’s Construction of Aging in the Context of Sexual Embodiment After Prostate Cancer
  33. Constructions and experiences of motherhood in the context of an early intervention for Aboriginal mothers and their children: mother and healthcare worker perspectives
  34. Misogyny
  35. Threat of Sexual Disqualification: The Consequences of Erectile Dysfunction and Other Sexual Changes for Gay and Bisexual Men With Prostate Cancer
  36. Health-Related Quality of Life, Psychological Distress, and Sexual Changes Following Prostate Cancer: A Comparison of Gay and Bisexual Men With Heterosexual Men
  37. Let's talk about gay sex: gay and bisexual men's sexual communication with healthcare professionals after prostate cancer
  38. Talking about fertility in the context of cancer: health care professional perspectives
  39. A randomized trial of a minimal intervention for sexual concerns after cancer: a comparison of self-help and professionally delivered modalities
  40. Breast cancer
  41. Perceived causes and consequences of sexual changes after cancer for women and men: a mixed method study
  42. Sex and the menopausal woman: A critical review and analysis
  43. Women’s Construction of Embodiment and the Abject Sexual Body After Cancer
  44. Discourse Analysis
  45. ‘Not that I want to be thought of as a hero’: Narrative analysis of performative masculinities and the experience of informal cancer caring
  46. Uncontrollable behavior or mental illness? Exploring constructions of bulimia using Q methodology
  47. Talking about sex with health professionals: the experience of people with cancer and their partners
  48. Young women’s construction of their post-cancer fertility
  49. Women's Sexuality after Cancer: A Qualitative Analysis of Sexual Changes and Renegotiation
  50. Pathology or source of power? The construction and experience of premenstrual syndrome within two contrasting cases
  51. Feeling well and talking about sex: psycho-social predictors of sexual functioning after cancer
  52. Women Voicing Resistance
  53. Ways of coping with premenstrual change: development and validation of a premenstrual coping measure
  54. Representations of PMS and Premenstrual Women in Men's Accounts: An Analysis of Online Posts from PMSBuddy.com
  55. Depression
  56. Madness
  57. Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder
  58. Loss, uncertainty, or acceptance: subjective experience of changes to fertility after breast cancer
  59. Talking about sex after cancer: A discourse analytic study of health care professional accounts of sexual communication with patients
  60. Constructions and experiences of sexual health among young, heterosexual, unmarried Muslim women immigrants in Australia
  61. Men's experiences of sexuality after cancer: a material discursive intra-psychic approach
  62. Jane M. Ussher The Madness of Women: Myth and Experience
  63. PMS as a process of negotiation: Women’s experience and management of premenstrual distress
  64. Embodying sexual subjectivity after cancer: A qualitative study of people with cancer and intimate partners
  65. Constructions of sex and intimacy after cancer: Q methodology study of people with cancer, their partners, and health professionals
  66. The Gendered Construction and Experience of Difficulties and Rewards in Cancer Care
  67. Diagnosing difficult women and pathologising femininity: Gender bias in psychiatric nosology
  68. Renegotiating Sex and Intimacy After Cancer
  69. A randomised controlled trial comparing psychological treatment and medical treatment for pre-menstrual syndrome (PMS)
  70. The effect of acupuncture on post-cancer fatigue and well-being for women recovering from breast cancer: a pilot randomised controlled trial
  71. Information needs associated with changes to sexual well-being after breast cancer
  72. It’s not all bad: Women’s construction and lived experience of positive premenstrual change
  73. Purity, Privacy and Procreation: Constructions and Experiences of Sexual and Reproductive Health in Assyrian and Karen Women Living in Australia
  74. Changes to Sexual Well-Being and Intimacy After Breast Cancer
  75. Erratum to “Sexuality after breast cancer: A review” [Maturitas 66 (2010) 397–407]
  76. The Effect of Acupuncture on Psychosocial Outcomes for Women Experiencing Infertility: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
  77. Sexuality after gynaecological cancer: A review of the material, intrapsychic, and discursive aspects of treatment on women's sexual-wellbeing
  78. Gender differences in cancer carer psychological distress: an analysis of moderators and mediators
  79. PMS as a Gendered Illness Linked to the Construction and Relational Experience of Hetero-Femininity
  80. The Madness of Women
  81. A qualitative analysis of changes in relationship dynamics and roles between people with cancer and their primary informal carer
  82. Positive and Negative Interactions With Health Professionals
  83. Sexuality after breast cancer: A review
  84. Gender Differences in Self-Silencing and Psychological Distress in Informal Cancer Carers
  85. Disruption of the Silenced Self: The Case of Premenstrual Syndrome
  86. Are We Medicalizing Women’s Misery? A Critical Review of Women’s Higher Rates of Reported Depression
  87. The Gains and Pains of Being a Cancer Support Group Leader: A Qualitative Survey of Rewards and Challenges
  88. Heterocentric Practices in Health Research and Health Care: Implications for Mental Health and Subjectivity of LGBTQ Individuals
  89. Accounts of disruptions to sexuality following cancer: the perspective of informal carers who are partners of a person with cancer
  90. Changes in Sexuality and Intimacy After the Diagnosis and Treatment of Cancer
  91. Erratum
  92. Strength through adversity: Bereaved cancer carers' accounts of rewards and personal growth from caring
  93. Bereaved informal cancer carers making sense of their palliative care experiences at home
  94. Evaluating the efficacy of psycho-social interventions for informal carers of cancer patients: a systematic review of the research literature
  95. Connectedness, Communication, and Reciprocity in Lesbian Relationships
  96. Negotiating Premenstrual Ruptures in Self- Silencing in Lesbian and Heterosexual Relationships
  97. Renegotiating Sexuality and Intimacy in the Context of Cancer: The Experiences of Carers
  98. Gender differences in the construction and experience of cancer care: The consequences of the gendered positioning of carers
  99. Sex as Commodity
  100. Reclaiming Embodiment within Critical Psychology: A Material-Discursive Analysis of the Menopausal Body
  101. A Complex Negotiation: Women's Experiences of Naming and Not Naming Premenstrual Distress in Couple Relationships
  102. “The horror of this living decay”: Women's negotiation and resistance of medical discourses around menopause and midlife
  103. A Qualitative Analysis of Reasons for Leaving, or Not Attending, a Cancer Support Group
  104. Life with HIV and AIDS in the Era of Effective Treatments: ‘It's Not Just about Living Longer!’
  105. How Do Subjectively-Constructed Meanings Ascribed to Anti-HIV Treatments Affect Treatment-Adherent Practice?
  106. Challenging the Positioning of Premenstrual Change as PMS: The Impact of a Psychological Intervention on Women's Self-Policing
  107. Empathy, Egalitarianism and Emotion Work in the Relational Negotiation of PMS: The Experience of Women in Lesbian Relationships
  108. 10. Managing the Monstrous Feminine: The Role of Premenstrual Syndrome in the Subjectification of Women
  109. “If Sex Hurts, Am I Still a Woman?” The Subjective Experience of Vulvodynia in Hetero-Sexual Women
  110. What is the ideal support group? Views of Australian people with cancer and their carers
  111. Women's experience of premenstrual syndrome: a case of silencing the self
  112. Evaluating the relative efficacy of a self‐help and minimal psycho‐educational intervention for moderate premenstrual distress conducted from a critical realist standpoint
  113. What do cancer support groups provide which other supportive relationships do not? The experience of peer support groups for people with cancer
  114. Sustaining Leaders of Cancer Support Groups
  115. Managing the Monstrous Feminine
  116. Women, Madness and the Law
  117. V. The Meaning of Sexual Desire: Experiences of Heterosexual and Lesbian Girls
  118. Premenstrual Syndrome and Self-policing: Ruptures in Self-Silencing Leading to Increased Self-Surveillance and Blaming of the Body
  119. IV. Biological Politics Revisited: Reclaiming the Body and the Intra-psychic within Discursive Feminist Psychology
  120. IV. Biological Politics Revisited: Reclaiming the Body and the Intra-psychic within Discursive Feminist Psychology
  121. The ongoing silencing of women in families: an analysis and rethinking of premenstrual syndrome and therapy
  122. I. Biology as Destiny: The Legacy of Victorian Gynaecology in the 21st Century
  123. I. Biology as Destiny: The Legacy of Victorian Gynaecology in the 21st Century
  124. Medical (fluoxetine) and psychological (cognitive–behavioural therapy) treatment for premenstrual dysphoric disorder
  125. Body Talk
  126. A woman-centred psychological intervention for premenstrual symptoms, drawing on cognitive-behavioural and narrative therapy
  127. Processes of appraisal and coping in the development and maintenance of Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder
  128. Making Sense of S&M: A Discourse Analytic Account
  129. Guest editorial: Critical psychology
  130. Gender issues and women's health
  131. Premenstrual syndrome
  132. A double blind placebo controlled trial examining the relationship between Health-Related Quality of Life and dietary supplements
  133. Negotiating Desire and Sexual Subjectivity: Narratives of Young Lesbian Avengers
  134. Eclecticism and Methodological Pluralism
  135. Beyond this mortal coil: Femininity, death and discursive constructions of the anorexic body
  136. The Case of the Lesbian Phallus: Bridging the Gap between Material and Discursive Analyses of Sexuality
  137. Bloody Women: A Discourse Analysis of Amenorrhea as a Symptom of Anorexia Nervosa
  138. Body Poly-texts: Discourses of the Anorexic Body
  139. Body Poly‐texts: Discourses of the Anorexic Body
  140. Masks of Middle-Class Belonging: Speaking of the Silent, Working-Class Past
  141. Seeking help for premenstrual syndrome: Women's self-reports and treatment preferences
  142. The nature and long-term effects of childhood sexual abuse: A survey of adult women survivors in Britain
  143. The relationship between health related quality of life and dietary supplementation in british middle managers: A double blind placebo controlled study
  144. Restraint and Perception of Body Weight among British Adults
  145. Sexing the Phallocentric Pages of Psychology: Repopulation is Not Enough
  146. III. Women and Madness: A Voice in the Dark of Women's Despair
  147. Research and theory related to female reproduction: Implications for clinical psychology
  148. Interactions between stress and performance during the menstrual cycle in relation to the premenstrual syndrome
  149. The Demise of Dissent and the Rise of Cognition in Menstrual-Cycle Research
  150. Female Reproductive Syndromes
  151. Sex Differences in Performance: Fact, Fiction or Fantasy?
  152. The Psychology of Women’s Health and Health Care
  153. Reproductive Rhetoric and the Blaming of the Body
  154. Reviews
  155. Clinical Psychology and Sexual Equality: A Contradiction in Terms?
  156. Family and couples therapy with gay and lesbian clients: acknowledging the forgotten minority
  157. Performance and state changes during the menstrual cycle, conceptualised within a broad band testing framework
  158. The future of sex and marital therapy in the face of widespread criticism: Caught between the devil and the deep blue sea
  159. Couples therapy with gay clients: Issues facing counsellors
  160. Cognitive behavioural couples therapy with gay men referred for counselling in an AIDS setting: A pilot study
  161. Gender issues in clinical psychology
  162. Feminist Approaches to Qualitative Health Research
  163. Women's Madness: A Material-Discursive-Intrapsychic Approach
  164. Gender Matters: Differences in Depression between Women and Men
  165. Good, bad or dangerous to know
  166. Physical activity interventions