Something for the weekend: Decolonizing Methodologies in Qualitative Research: Creating Spaces for Transformative PraxisWearables as a tool for measuring therapeutic adherence in behavioral healthTheorizing bodily dialogs – reflection on knowledge production in phenomenological researchThe war on critical race theoryTo Care as we Would Like to: Socio-ecological crisis and our impasse of careWhy should nurses care if Heidegger was a Nazi? Pragmatics, politics and philosophy in nursingWays of walking, speaking and listeningBeing in the World - On the Subject of the Heideggerian Dasein (Flim)What is critical realism? And why should you care?Recent scientific/intellectual movements in … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #146
CPN Digest #145
Something for the weekend Women, Exercise, and Eating Disorder Recovery: The Normal and the PathologicalWalking ABER: Of pedagogy, practice and potentialityIntersecting the body and curriculum: Nineteenth-century dandyism and physical trainingWhat is critical about critical public health?Against wellbeing, and, in a similar vein The problems with resilience thinkingThe “nurse as hero” discourse in the COVID-19 pandemic: A poststructural discourse analysisThe sociology of medical education from 1980 to 2000Palantir’s Picture of Michel Foucault, or How to “Discipline and Punish”Which Scientific Disciplines Cite Philosophy of Science?Proposed new curriculum acknowledges First Nations’ view … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #145
The evidence for EBP is not self-evident
There is an interesting paradox to evidence-based practice. A person who believes in objective facts is likely to believe that there is a 'best way' to assess and treat people and that rigorous science is the way to locate it. A lot of our clinical trials, best practice guidelines, and quant research starts out with this premise. (We'll call this Option 1) But a person who believes that everyone is unique is also likely to believe that what works depends on the person's perspective, and that what constitutes evidence will be shaped by their unique life experiences and history. Qualitative research and person-centered care start here. (Option 2) And then there are people who believe … [Read more...] about The evidence for EBP is not self-evident
CPN Digest #144
Something for the weekend: Anarchy in the H.E. talks to Alex BroadbentBlack Feminists on Freedom, Land, the Body, and the ArchiveA ‘toxic’ and dehumanising culture: how Australian gymnastics needs to reform in wake of damning reportPandemic conversations #1, #2, #3, and #4Notes on Negative Theology and Adorno’s Negative DialecticsA Theory of Thorstein VeblenGardening with NietzscheGathering on the Wrong Side of the Road: Critical Race Scholarship Across the Health HumanitiesExploring How Racism Structures Canadian Physical Therapy Programs: Counter-Stories From Racialized StudentsJust to get out of the house: a maternal lens on suburban walking as arts practiceTouch is Really … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #144
CPN Digest #143
Something for the weekend: Microsoft Makes a $16 Billion Entry Into Health Care AIWhat is critical about critical public health? Focus on health inequalitiesNHS in Critical ConditionNegotiating identity, place and embodiment in qualitative researchTechnologies of self-cultivation how to improve Stoic self-care appsThe dark side of our age of fitnessManaging (im) patience of nurses and nurse's aides: Emotional labour and normalizing practices at geriatric facilitiesEnabling personal recovery from fibromyalgia – theoretical rationale, content and meaning of a person-centred, recovery-oriented programmeAdvice Not Safely Ignored: Professional Authority and the Strength of Legitimate … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #143
CPN Digest #142
Something for the weekend: Remembering Anatomy Lessons in an Immigration Detention CenterDNA-inspired ‘supercoiling’ fibres could make powerful artificial muscles for robotsThe strokeNudge Economics as Libertarian PaternalismThe Secret to Superhuman StrengthYearning for touch — a photo essayWhat Would A 'Feminist Internet' Look Like?The new Journal of Controversial IdeasA neoliberal transformation or the revival of ancient healing?Theorising rehabilitation: Actors and parameters shaping normality, liminality and depersonalisation in a UK hospitalBeyond Physical and Psychological Health: Philosophical HealthCovid Diaries: hermeneutic self-careMichel Foucault and the Social ContractThe … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #142
CPN Digest #141
Something for the weekend: Breathtaking: Asthma Care in a Time of Climate ChangeMerleau-Ponty: Beauty, Phenomenology, and the ‘Theological Turn’Feeling the Real: The Non-Nomadic Subject of FeminismCfP: Dis-abling Spaces and Cultures in Times of CrisisTheorising rehabilitation: Actors and parameters shaping normality, liminality and depersonalisation in a UK hospitalPhysiotherapists’ attitudes and beliefs about low back pain influence their clinical decisions and adviceUnlearning to Be Human? The Pedagogical Implications of 21st-Century Postanthropocentrism“Kicking and Screaming” or “Gracefully Conceding”: Creative Nonfiction Stories of Aging With Multiple SclerosisTo Care as we Would Like … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #141