All Stories

  1. The views of postnatal women and midwives on midwives providing contraceptive advice and methods: a mixed method concurrent study
  2. Natural Cycles app: contraceptive outcomes and demographic analysis of UK users
  3. An exploration of the role of advanced clinical practitioners in the East of England
  4. ‘They come with their own ideas of what they want’: Healthcare educator, advanced practice student and manager perspectives on learning outcomes
  5. What is the evidence that can inform the implementation of a preceptorship scheme for general practice nurses, and what is the evidence for the benefits of such a scheme?: A literature review and synthesis
  6. What consultation resources are available to support delivery of integrated sexual and reproductive health services? A scoping review
  7. A summary of published evidence around the reproductive control of women by men.
  8. Practitioner views on Barriers to providing intrauterine contraception (coils) in General Practice?
  9. Views and concerns of women about Intra-uterine contraception
  10. Stage 1 development of a patient-reported experience measure (PREM) for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
  11. What predicts non-use of intra-uterine contraception?
  12. Oestrogen/progesterone should be clearly explained
  13. Juliet Mitchell and the Lateral Axis
  14. The Etiology of Hysteria in Mitchell’s Mad Men and Medusas
  15. Views of final-year student midwives on giving postpartum contraception and sexual health advice
  16. Midwifery students knowledge of contraceptive methods
  17. Clinicians should consider the effect of bodily metaphors when discussing contraceptive options
  18. Body metphors and contraception
  19. Attitudes to a male contraceptive pill in a group of contraceptive users in the UK
  20. Are limited opening times really to blame for men's underuse of healthcare services?
  21. Women in medicine
  22. Co-Mothering
  23. Introductory Chapter to Juliet Mitchell & the Lateral Axis
  24. How Juliet Mitchell comes to a theory of male hysteria in her book "Madmen and Medusas"