All Stories

  1. ‘Willy nilly’ doctors, bad patients, and resistant bodies in general public explanations of antimicrobial resistance
  2. Role crisis, risk and trust in Australian general public narratives about antibiotic use and antimicrobial resistance
  3. Navigating HIV citizenship: identities, risks and biological citizenship in the treatment as prevention era
  4. Understanding the relationship between pet owners and their companion animals as a key context for antimicrobial resistance-related behaviours: an interpretative phenomenological analysis
  5. Exploring the behavioural drivers of veterinary surgeon antibiotic prescribing: a qualitative study of companion animal veterinary surgeons in the UK
  6. A visual affective analysis of mass media interventions to increase antimicrobial stewardship amongst the public
  7. What are the ‘active ingredients’ of interventions targeting the public's engagement with antimicrobial resistance and how might they work?
  8. Pet owner and vet interactions: exploring the drivers of AMR
  9. Effectiveness of interventions to improve the public’s antimicrobial resistance awareness and behaviours associated with prudent use of antimicrobials: a systematic review
  10. The private life of medicine: accounting for antibiotics in the ‘for-profit’ hospital setting
  11. Understanding media publics and the antimicrobial resistance crisis
  12. Investigating Public trust in Expert Knowledge: Narrative, Ethics, and Engagement
  13. Preparedness for use of the rapid result HIV self-test by gay men and other men who have sex with men (MSM): a mixed methods exploratory study among MSM and those involved in HIV prevention and care
  14. Location, safety and (non) strangers in gay men’s narratives on ‘hook-up’ apps
  15. Towards preparedness for PrEP: PrEP awareness and acceptability among MSM at high risk of HIV transmission who use sociosexual media in four Celtic nations: Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and The Republic of Ireland: an online survey
  16. On Secrecy, Disclosure, the Public, and the Private in Anthropology
  17. Between bushfire risk and love of environment: preparedness, precariousness and survival in the narratives of urban fringe dwellers in Australia
  18. Beyond resistance: social factors in the general public response to pandemic influenza
  19. Immunity, Biopolitics and Pandemics: Public and Individual Responses to the Threat to Life
  20. Sex, Health and the Technological Imagination
  21. ‘Fuzzy’ virus: indeterminate influenza biology, diagnosis and surveillance in the risk ontologies of the general public in time of pandemics
  22. “We Became Sceptics”: Fear and Media Hype in General Public Narrative on the Advent of Pandemic Influenza
  23. Understanding pandemic influenza behaviour: An exploratory biopsychosocial study
  24. After the clinic? Researching sexual health technology in context
  25. Australia’s pandemic influenza ‘Protect’ phase: emerging out of the fog of pandemic
  26. Mobilising “vulnerability” in the public health response to pandemic influenza
  27. Biography, pandemic time and risk: Pregnant women reflecting on their experiences of the 2009 influenza pandemic
  28. Obstinate essentialism: identity transformations amongst gay men living with HIV
  29. ‘We had to do what we thought was right at the time’: retrospective discourse on the 2009 H1N1 pandemic in the UK
  30. Understanding the biopsychosocial aspects of HIV disclosure among HIV-positive gay men in Scotland
  31. Understanding the impact of HIV diagnosis amongst gay men in Scotland: An interpretative phenomenological analysis
  32. Biomedicalization: technoscience, health, and illness in the US
  33. Compliant, complacent or panicked? Investigating the problematisation of the Australian general public in pandemic influenza control
  34. Advancing biosocial pedagogy for HIV education
  35. Identity, Expertise and HIV Risk in a Case Study of Reflexivity and Medical Technologies
  36. E-dating, identity and HIV prevention: theorising sexualities, risk and network society
  37. Gay men who look for sex on the Internet: is there more HIV/STI risk with online partners?
  38. Reflecting on the experience of interviewing online: perspectives from the Internet and HIV study in London
  39. The Internet and HIV study: design and methods