Ann Dadich
Ann Dadich
While the discourse on care is largely pessimistic, brilliance happens, demonstrated by instances when care exceeded expectation. To advance brilliant care scholarship, this article asks, what are the domains that enable it? Through a refle...
Sleepscapes: rhythms, routines, and the dynamics of everyday and everynight life [0.03%]
睡眠图景:日常生活的节奏、惯例及其昼夜动态学
Dana Zarhin
Dana Zarhin
Sociologists are increasingly interested in exploring the role of time in relation to illness, disability, and care. However, the question of how individuals experience and navigate the temporal dimensions of sleep in their everyday and eve...
Pregnancy, placentas and smoke exposure: multiple understandings of pregnant embodiment during the 2019-2020 Australian bushfires [0.03%]
孕期、胎盘和烟雾暴露:2019-2020年澳大利亚丛林大火期间怀孕体验的多重理解
Rebecca Williamson,Celia Roberts,Louisa Allen et al.
Rebecca Williamson et al.
The health implications of prolonged wildfire smoke exposure - such as that seen during the 2019-2020 Australian bushfires - are a major concern in public health, not only in Australia but in many fire-prone areas globally. One group identi...
From 'living death' to 'becoming-with': caring for dementia beyond the human [0.03%]
从“活着的死亡”到“共生”:超越人类的痴呆护理
Aikaterini Mentzou,Josephine Ross,Maggie P Ellis et al.
Aikaterini Mentzou et al.
This essay provides a critical overview of historical and contemporary conceptualisations of selfhood in dementia. We explore the intersections of psychological and sociological research, as well as care practices, in dementia scholarship a...
The contemporary (re-)configuration of global health governance: reevaluating health politics in the COVID-19 pandemic [0.03%]
当代全球卫生治理的重构:重新评估新冠肺炎疫情下的卫生政策
Michael Rabi,Limor Samimian-Darash,Stefan Elbe et al.
Michael Rabi et al.
The COVID-19 pandemic has raised probing questions about the politics that underly health governance. This article engages with recent sociological and political analyses in this regard and offers a reconsideration of what the pandemic repr...
Reading as therapy: medicalising books in an era of mental health austerity [0.03%]
读书法医化:心理健康紧缩时代的疗法书籍
Hayley Redman,Judith Green,Gill Partington et al.
Hayley Redman et al.
In the UK, a range of everyday activities are being re-framed as interventions to promote public mental health. Drivers of this include the rising burden of mental ill-health and constrained funding for community-based arts and educational ...
Burdening patients: qualitative analysis of healthism in community-based hypertension care in China [0.03%]
我国社区高血压治疗中以健康为中心的医患关系定性分析
Bo Li
Bo Li
Healthism, a neoliberal ideology that frames health as an individual responsibility and moral duty, inherently operates as a blame-the-victim framework, attributing health outcomes primarily to personal choices and behaviours. This qualitat...
COVID-19 and nurse practitioner autonomy: a quantitative analysis and analytic narrative of nurse practitioner professionalisation amid physician dominance [0.03%]
新冠肺炎疫情下的护理专业人员自主权:定量分析及医生主导背景下护理专业发展的叙事研究
Clayton D Thomas,Scott Feyereisen,William R McConnell et al.
Clayton D Thomas et al.
One understudied aspect of the COVID-19 pandemic is the opportunity it provided for nurse practitioners (NPs) to practice autonomously and therefore professionalise. We undertake a quantitative analysis to understand how the pandemic impact...
Learning how to live well: the transformative potential of youth AOD biopedagogies [0.03%]
善加利用还是误入歧途:青年药物滥用的生物教育学及其转变效应
Joanne Bryant,Gabriel Caluzzi,Jennifer Skattebol et al.
Joanne Bryant et al.
We draw on the concept of 'biopedagogies' to explore the effects of 'living skills' training for young people in alcohol and other drug (AOD) treatment; that is, the knowledge and skill needed for everyday living to manage work, relationshi...