All Stories

  1. Sexual violence and safety: the narratives of transwomen in online forums
  2. ‘There was a struggle between my instinct and my head’: women’s perception and experience of masturbation in contemporary Vietnam
  3. Enhancing life purpose amongst Thai adolescents
  4. Meanings of Sexuality among Heterosexual Women: A Metasynthesis
  5. What makes working mothers continue to discontinue breastfeeding
  6. Parents’ experiences of their children’s supplementary reading intervention: A qualitative exploration
  7. Breast Cancer Treatment
  8. Children and Young People Living with HIV/AIDS
  9. Children, Young People and HIV/AIDS: A Cross-Cultural Perspective
  10. HIV/AIDS Knowledge and Risk of HIV/AIDS Among Youth in South Africa
  11. Young LGBT People, and HIV/AIDS Risks: A Metasynthesis
  12. Reproductive and Sexual Health of People with Physical Disabilities: A Metasynthesis
  13. Cultural Insiders and Research Fieldwork
  14. Social Support and Women Living With Breast Cancer in the South of Thailand
  15. Sexual health knowledge and needs among young Muslims women in Australia
  16. Early motherhood: a qualitative study exploring the experiences of African Australian teenage mothers in greater Melbourne, Australia
  17. The portrayal of mental health in Australian daily newspapers
  18. Breast cancer diagnosis: biographical disruption, emotional experiences and strategic management in Thai women with breast cancer
  19. Falls, Falls Prevention and the Role of Physiotherapy and Exercise: Perceptions and Interpretations of Italian-Born and Australian-Born Older Persons Living in Australia
  20. Living with breast cancer: the experiences and meaning-making among women in Southern Thailand
  21. Social support and coping means: the lived experiences of Northeastern Thai women with breast cancer
  22. Factors Influencing Contraception Awareness and Use: The Experiences of Young African Australian mothers
  23. Participating in HIV Clinical Trials: Reasons and Experiences Among Women Living With HIV in Thailand
  24. The Lived Experiences of Transgender Persons: A Meta-Synthesis
  25. Peer support groups, mobile phones and refugee women in Melbourne
  26. Therapeutic landscapes and living with breast cancer: The lived experiences of Thai women
  27. Families’ experiences of their interactions with staff in an Australian intensive care unit (ICU): A qualitative study
  28. My life as Mae Tid Chua [mothers who contracted HIV disease]: Motherhood and women living with HIV/AIDS in central Thailand
  29. Social connectedness and mobile phone use among refugee women in Australia
  30. What makes people sick? Burmese refugee children's perceptions of health and illness
  31. Local Discourse on Antiretrovirals and the Lived Experience of Women Living With HIV/AIDS in Thailand
  32. 159 Breast cancer treatment: Experiences of changes and stigma among Thai women in southern Thailand
  33. 157 Living with breast cancer: emotional experiences of Thai women
  34. To tell or not to tell: disclosure to children and family amongst Thai women living with HIV/AIDS: Table 1:
  35. Pregnancy, childbirth and motherhood: A meta-synthesis of the lived experiences of immigrant women
  36. Female Bodybuilding: Perceived Social and Psychological Effects of Participating in the Figure Class
  37. Creating communicatively accessible healthcare environments: Perceptions of speech-language pathologists
  38. Traditional Health Services Utilization among Indigenous Peoples
  39. Reading Recovery teachers discuss Reading Recovery: a qualitative investigation
  40. Contemporary Socio-Cultural and Political Perspectives in Thailand
  41. The Drawing Method: Researching Young People with a Disability
  42. Exploring the Impacts of Stigma and Discrimination on Female Street-Based Sex Workers
  43. Exploring Working Women's Experiences with Regard to Infant Feeding Choices in Urban Malaysia: A Case of Research Project
  44. Why older people engage in physical activity: an exploratory study of participants in a community-based walking program
  45. Burmese refugee young women navigating parental expectations and resettlement
  46. Authoritative Knowledge, Folk Knowledge, and Antenatal Care in Contemporary Northern Thailand
  47. Phum Panya Chao Baan (Local Wisdom) and Traditional Healers in Southern Thailand
  48. The good fit of ethnographic methodology in cross-cultural research
  49. Burmese refugee young women navigating parental expectations and resettlement
  50. Sensitive Research and Vulnerable Participants: Accessing and Conducting Research with African Australian Teenage Mothers in Greater Melbourne, Australia
  51. Contraception knowledge and attitudes: truths and myths among African Australian teenage mothers in Greater Melbourne, Australia
  52. Sensitive research and vulnerable participants: Accessing and conducting research with African Australian teenage mothers in greater Melbourne, Australia
  53. Cambodian migrant women's postpartum experiences in Victoria, Australia
  54. Food Decisions Among Cambodian Migrant Mothers in Melbourne, Australia
  55. Caught Between Two Worlds: Sexuality and Young Muslim Women in Melbourne, Australia
  56. Stigma, Discrimination and Living with HIV/AIDS
  57. Women, Motherhood and Living with HIV/AIDS
  58. Stigma, Discrimination, and HIV/AIDS: An Introduction
  59. Women, Motherhood, and Living with HIV/AIDS: An Introduction
  60. AIDS Support Groups and Women Living with HIV/AIDS in Central Thailand
  61. Constant connections: piloting a mobile phone-based peer support program for Nuer (southern Sudanese) women
  62. Women, Motherhood, and Living Positively: The Lived Experience of Thai Women Living with HIV/AIDS
  63. Infant Feeding Practices
  64. What are the real and perceived risks and dangers of online dating? Perspectives from online daters
  65. Midwife
  66. Seeking help chaow baan ways in southern Thailand
  67. Folk healing and health care practices in Britain and Ireland: Stethoscopes, wands and crystals
  68. Walk a mile in my shoes: Life as a mother of a child with Asperger's Syndrome
  69. Living Positively
  70. Being the Mother of a Child With Asperger's Syndrome: Women's Experiences of Stigma
  71. Existing Roles of Traditional Healers (mor baan) in Southern Thailand
  72. Infant Feeding Practices
  73. Motherhood and Postnatal Depression
  74. Focus Group Methodology: Principles and Practice
  75. Journeys to Resolution
  76. Detection of Postnatal Depression
  77. Postscript
  78. Biopsychosocial Theories and Treatment Options for Postnatal Depression
  79. Introduction: From Pregnancy to Resolution from Postnatal Depression
  80. Mothering Alone: The Adjustment to Motherhood
  81. International students in Australia: their challenges and implications for university counselling services
  82. Living with Uncertainty: The Partners’ Experiences of Postnatal Depression
  83. ‘Kept in the Dark’: Childhood, Pregnancy and Childbirth Experiences
  84. ‘Postnatal’: Trapped, Alone in the Dark – Women’s Experiences of Postnatal Depression and Drawings
  85. Traditional Healers (mor pheun baan) in Southern Thailand: The Barriers for Cooperation With Modern Health Care Delivery
  86. Infant Feeding Beliefs and Practices Across Cultures: An Introduction
  87. Good Mothers and Infant Feeding Practices Amongst Women in Northern Thailand
  88. Recovery after caesarean birth: a qualitative study of women's accounts in Victoria, Australia
  89. Culture and sex education: the acquisition of sexual knowledge for a group of Vietnamese Australian young women
  90. The photovoice method: researching the experiences of Aboriginal health workers through photographs
  91. Motherhood, risk and responsibility: Infant care in Northern Thailand
  92. ‘Walk a mile in my shoes’: Researching the lived experience of mothers of children with autism
  93. HIV and AIDS, stigma and AIDS support groups: Perspectives from women living with HIV and AIDS in central Thailand
  94. Drawing the experience of chronic vaginal thrush and complementary and alternative medicine
  95. Researching sensitive topics: qualitative research as emotion work
  96. Performing Qualitative Cross-Cultural Research
  97. Nyob Nruab Hlis: Thirty Days Confinement in Hmong Culture
  98. Influence of traditional Vietnamese culture on the utilisation of mainstream health services for sexual health issues by second-generation Vietnamese Australian young women
  99. Pregnancy, Childbirth and Traditional Beliefs and Practices in Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand
  100. A holistic programme for mothers with postnatal depression: pilot study
  101. Online Dating and Mating: The Use of the Internet to Meet Sexual Partners
  102. Doing Cross-Cultural Research
  103. Doing Research in a Cross-Cultural Context: Methodological and Ethical Challenges
  104. Undertaking Sensitive Research in the Health and Social Sciences
  105. Oral language predictors for the at-risk reader: A review
  106. Risk to Researchers in Qualitative Research on Sensitive Topics: Issues and Strategies
  107. Online dating and mating: Perceptions of risk and health among online users
  108. Doing sensitive research: what challenges do qualitative researchers face?
  109. When giving life starts to take the life out of you: women's experiences of depression after childbirth
  110. Sex, love and gender norms: sexual life and experience of a group of young people in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
  111. Researching the Vulnerable
  112. The Meanings and Experiences of Cesarean Birth Among Cambodian, Lao and Vietnamese Immigrant Women in Australia
  113. Knowledge of Contraceptives and Sexually Transmitted Diseases and Contraceptive Practices Amongst Young People in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
  114. Motherhood and “Moral Career”: Discourses of Good Motherhood Among Southeast Asian Immigrant Women in Australia
  115. Knowledge and acceptance of human papillomavirus vaccination: perspectives of young Australians living in Melbourne, Australia
  116. Traditional beliefs about pregnancy and child birth among women from Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand
  117. Birth and social class: Northern Thai women's lived experiences of caesarean and vaginal birth
  118. Yu DuanPractices as Embodying Tradition, Modernity and Social Change in Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand
  119. When I become a mother!: Discourses of motherhood among Thai women in Northern Thailand
  120. GIVING BIRTH IN THE HOSPITAL: CHILDBIRTH EXPERIENCES OF THAI WOMEN IN NORTHERN THAILAND
  121. The views of older Chinese people in Melbourne about their quality of life
  122. LIFE AS MOTHERS IN A NEW LAND: THE EXPERIENCE OF MOTHERHOOD AMONG THAI WOMEN IN AUSTRALIA
  123. Why Do Women Decline Prenatal Screening and Diagnosis? Australian Women's Perspective
  124. Perceptions and experiences of motherhood, health and the husband's role among Thai women in Australia
  125. ABORTION—IT IS FOR SOME WOMEN ONLY! HMONG WOMEN’S PERCEPTIONS OF ABORTION
  126. ABORTION--IT IS FOR SOME WOMEN ONLY! HMONG WOMEN'S PERCEPTIONS OF ABORTION
  127. 'It was a nice day…a beautiful day': an analysis of relapse into substance misuse among Indigenous drinkers
  128. Pregnancy Loss
  129. The voices and concerns about prenatal testing of Cambodian, Lao and Vietnamese women in Australia
  130. Immigrant Women's Views About Care During Labor and Birth: An Australian Study of Vietnamese, Turkish, and Filipino Women
  131. Childrearing Practices and Child Health among the Hmong in Australia: Implications for Health Services
  132. BEING FEMALE: THE PORTRAYAL OF WOMEN'S HEALTH IN PRINT MEDIA
  133. Women as mothers
  134. What women from an Islamic background in Australia say about care in pregnancy and prenatal testing
  135. Prenatal testing: The perceptions and experiences of Muslim women in Australia
  136. Book Review: 'Qualitative Analysis: Practice and Innovation'
  137. CHILDREARING PRACTICES AND CHILD HEALTH AMONG THE HMONG IN AUSTRALIA: IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH SERVICES
  138. INFANT FEEDING PRACTICES: THE CASE OF HMONG WOMEN IN AUSTRALIA
  139. Hmong Women and Reproduction
  140. Breast-feeding practices among Thai women in Australia
  141. Motherhood and the Challenge of Immigrant Mothers: A Personal Reflection
  142. Infant Feeding Practices: The Case of Thai Immigrant Women in Australia
  143. Pregnancy, Prenatal Testing, and Abortion: A Perspective from Muslim Women in Australia
  144. Prenatal diagnosis for women aged 37 years and over: to have or not to have
  145. When the Baby Falls!: The Cultural Construction of Miscarriage Among Hmong Women in Australia
  146. Nyo dua hli– 30 days confinement: traditions and changed childbearing beliefs and practices among Hmong women in Australia
  147. Baby, souls, name and health: traditional customs for a newborn infant among the Hmong in Melbourne
  148. The Development of Indigenous Substance Misuse Services in Australia: Beliefs, Conflicts and Change
  149. Cross-cultural research: trying to do it better 2. Enhancing data quality
  150. Cross-cultural research: trying to do it better 2. Enhancing data quality
  151. PREGNANCY AND TECHNOLOGY: THAI WOMEN'S PERCEPTIONS AND EXPERIENCE OF PRENATAL TESTING
  152. Mothers in a New Country: The Role of Culture and Communication in Vietnamese, Turkish and Filipino Women's Experiences of Giving Birth in Australia
  153. Infant Weaning Practices among Hmong Women in Melbourne
  154. Women's Health in Melbourne's Print Media: A Content Analysis
  155. Caesarean or vaginal birth: perceptions and experience of Thai women in Australian hospitals
  156. Support, sensitivity, satisfaction: Filipino, Turkish and Vietnamese women's experiences of postnatal hospital stay
  157. The experience of pregnancy, labour and birth of Thai women in Australia
  158. Childhood Health and Illness: Cultural Beliefs and Practices among the Hmong in Victoria
  159. Multiculturalism policy and immigrants' health: are we achieving the goal?
  160. Giving birth in a new home: childbirth traditions and the experience of motherhood among Hmong women from Laos
  161. In Quality We Trust! The Role of Qualitative Data in Health Care
  162. Concepts of health and illness in Thai children
  163. Thai conceptions of illness
  164. Multiculturalism policy and immigrants' health: are we achieving the goal?
  165. Preface
  166. References
  167. Digital Storytelling
  168. Learning Window
  169. About the book
  170. Performing qualitative cross-cultural research: an introduction
  171. Moral and ethical perspectives
  172. The research participants: accessing and reciprocity
  173. Cultural sensitivity: a responsible researcher
  174. Insider/Outsider perspectives and placing issues
  175. Cross-cultural communication and language issues
  176. Personal and collective testimony
  177. Local knowledge, local power and collective action
  178. Writing and disseminating in cross-cultural research
  179. In closing …
  180. Researching Online Dating
  181. Researching Reproduction Qualitatively: Intersections of Personal and Political
  182. Online Dating and Mating: Methodological and Personal Reflections on our Journey
  183. Preface
  184. What is sensitive research?
  185. Emotions and sensitive research
  186. References
  187. Doing sensitive research: methodological, theoretical, ethical and moral perspectives
  188. Conducting a sensitive research project
  189. Managing risks and ethics in research
  190. Managing boundaries in sensitive research
  191. Implications and recommendations for researchers