All Stories

  1. Wrestling with uncertainty after mild traumatic brain injury: a mixed methods study
  2. Untangling chronic pain and post-concussion symptoms: the significance of depression
  3. Women's experiences of changes in eating during pregnancy: A qualitative study in Dunedin, New Zealand.
  4. Respondent driven sampling of wheelchair users: A lack of traction?
  5. Exercise adherence: integrating theory, evidence and behaviour change techniques
  6. Pelvic floor muscle training versus other treatment short Cochrane review
  7. “There are risks to be taken and some just push it too far”: how farmers perceive quad-bike incident risk
  8. Goal setting and strategies to enhance goal pursuit for adults with acquired disability participating in rehabilitation
  9. Scoping review of adherence promotion theories in pelvic floor muscle training - 2011 ics state-of-the-science seminar research paper i of iv
  10. Pelvic-floor-muscle-training adherence “modifiers”: A review of primary qualitative studies-2011 ICS State-of-the-Science Seminar research paper III of IV
  11. Health professionals’ and patients’ perspectives on pelvic floor muscle training adherence-2011 ICS State-of-the-Science Seminar research paper IV of IV
  12. 2014 consensus statement on improving pelvic floor muscle training adherence: International Continence Society 2011 State-of-the-Science Seminar
  13. Pelvic-Floor-Muscle Training Adherence: Tools, Measurements and Strategies-2011 ICS State-of-the-Science Seminar Research Paper II of IV
  14. Exercise adherence: integrating theory, evidence and behaviour change techniques
  15. Unrealistic Optimism, Fatalism, and Risk-Taking in New Zealand Farmers’ Descriptions of Quad-Bike Incidents: A Directed Qualitative Content Analysis
  16. The contribution of psychological factors to recovery after mild traumatic brain injury: Is cluster analysis a useful approach?
  17. Pelvic floor muscle training versus no treatment, or inactive control treatments, for urinary incontinence in women: A short version Cochrane systematic review with meta-analysis
  18. Recovery-related anxiety and disability following upper limb injury: the importance of context
  19. The Contribution of Psychological Factors to Recovery After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: Prospective Cohort Study
  20. Are agricultural quad bike loss-of-control events driven by unrealistic optimism?
  21. Fear Avoidance Beliefs, Held by Occupational Therapists, are Associated with Treatment Recommendations
  22. Pelvic floor muscle training versus no treatment, or inactive control treatments, for urinary incontinence in women
  23. Attending to biographical disruption: the experience of rehabilitation following tetraplegia due to spinal cord injury
  24. Agricultural Quad-bike Incidents: Do Farmworkers Take Risks?
  25. Pelvic floor muscle training added to another active treatment versus the same active treatment alone for urinary incontinence in women
  26. Women’s experiences of doing long-term pelvic floor muscle exercises for the treatment of pelvic organ prolapse symptoms
  27. Pelvic floor muscle training added to another active treatment versus the same active treatment alone for urinary incontinence in women
  28. Examination of outcome after mild traumatic brain injury: The contribution of injury beliefs and Leventhal's Common Sense Model
  29. Pelvic floor muscle training for prevention and treatment of urinary and fecal incontinence in antenatal and postnatal women: A short version Cochrane review
  30. Retroalimentación (feedback) o biorretroalimentación (biofeedback) para aumentar el entrenamiento muscular del piso pelviano en la incontinencia urinaria de la mujer
  31. Feedback or biofeedback to augment pelvic floor muscle training for urinary incontinence in women: Shortened version of a Cochrane systematic review
  32. “The final piece of the puzzle to fit in”: an interpretative phenomenological analysis of the return to employment in New Zealand after spinal cord injury
  33. Liminality and decision making for upper limb surgery in tetraplegia: a grounded theory
  34. Pelvic floor muscle training for prevention and treatment of urinary and faecal incontinence in antenatal and postnatal women
  35. Leaving a spinal unit and returning to the wider community: an interpretative phenomenological analysis
  36. Issues influencing the decision to have upper limb surgery for people with tetraplegia
  37. Goal setting and activities to enhance goal pursuit for adults with acquired disabilities participating in rehabilitation
  38. Which anticholinergic drug for overactive bladder symptoms in adults
  39. Comparisons of approaches to pelvic floor muscle training for urinary incontinence in women
  40. Different methods of allocation to groups in randomized trials are associated with different levels of bias. A meta-epidemiological study
  41. Associations between illness perceptions, coping styles and outcome after mild traumatic brain injury: Preliminary results from a cohort study
  42. Feedback or biofeedback to augment pelvic floor muscle training for urinary incontinence in women
  43. Meta-analyses of small numbers of trials often agree with longer-term results
  44. Factor Structure of the Brief COPE in People With Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
  45. Combined conservative interventions for urge, stress or mixed incontinence in adults
  46. Rural Workers’ Experience of Low Back Pain: Exploring Why They Continue to Work
  47. An examination of the factor structure of the Revised Illness Perception Questionnaire modified for adults with mild traumatic brain injury
  48. Lifestyle interventions for the treatment of urinary incontinence in adults
  49. Pelvic floor muscle training versus no treatment, or inactive control treatments, for urinary incontinence in women
  50. Musculoskeletal pain and treatment choice: an exploration of illness perceptions and choices of conventional or complementary therapies
  51. Research priorities in urinary incontinence: results from citizens’ juries
  52. A systematic review of psychological treatments for mild traumatic brain injury: An update on the evidence
  53. Pelvic floor muscle training for prevention and treatment of urinary and faecal incontinence in antenatal and postnatal women
  54. Anticholinergic drugs, bladder retraining and their combination for urge urinary incontinence: a pilot randomised trial
  55. Pelvic floor muscle training for urinary incontinence in women
  56. Evidence for the Effectiveness of Pelvic Floor Muscle Training in the Treatment and Antenatal Prevention of Female Urinary Incontinence
  57. Physical therapies for prevention of urinary and faecal incontinence in adults
  58. Comments on article by Lewis and Johnson: ‘The clinical effectiveness of therapeutic massage for musculoskeletal pain: a systematic review. Physiotherapy 2006;92:146–58’
  59. The silent, private exercise: experiences of pelvic floor muscle training in a sample of women with stress urinary incontinence
  60. Adjustment of meta-analyses on the basis of quality scores should be abandoned
  61. Anticholinergic drugs versus placebo for overactive bladder syndrome in adults
  62. Pelvic floor muscle training for urinary incontinence in women
  63. Pelvic floor muscle training versus no treatment, or inactive control treatments, for urinary incontinence in women
  64. The assessment of levator trauma: A comparison between palpation and 4D pelvic floor ultrasound
  65. Which anticholinergic drug for overactive bladder symptoms in adults
  66. Which anticholinergic drug for urinary incontinence in adults?
  67. Incontinence-specific quality of life measures used in trials of treatments for female urinary incontinence: a systematic review
  68. Physical Therapies for Prevention of Urinary and Faecal Incontinence in Adults
  69. Anticholinergic drugs versus placebo for overactive bladder syndrome in adults
  70. Physical therapies for prevention of urinary and faecal incontinence in adults
  71. Oxybutynin is more effective than tolterodine for urge urinary incontinence, but is not as well tolerated
  72. Which anticholinergic drug for urinary incontinence in adults?
  73. Anticholinergic drugs versus non-drug active therapies for overactive bladder syndrome in adults
  74. Pelvic floor muscle training for urinary incontinence in women
  75. Pelvic floor re-education reduced incontinence at 1 year after radical prostatectomy
  76. Persistent Postnatal Perineal Pain and Dyspareunia: A Review of Physical Pathology and Treatment
  77. Therapeutic ultrasound for postpartum perineal pain and dyspareunia
  78. Erratum: Physical agents for perineal pain following childbirth: a review of systematic reviews
  79. Erratum: Physical agents for perineal pain following childbirth: a review of systematic reviews
  80. Physical agents for perineal pain following childbirth: a review of systematic reviews
  81. Physical agents for perineal pain following childbirth: a review of systematic reviews
  82. Symphysis Pubis Dysfunction
  83. Surveys of the Experience and Perceptions of Post-natal Superficial Dyspareunia of Post-natal Women, General Practitioners and Physiotherapists
  84. Old Problem — New Perspective
  85. Post-natal Superficial Dyspareunia
  86. Recovery-Related Anxiety Questionnaire
  87. Pelvic Floor Muscle Training for Urinary Incontinence in Women
  88. Face to Face Interview Concerning Return to Community after Leaving Spinal Unit