Something for the weekend: Anarchy in the H.E. - Roger Kerry talks to Joost van WijchenReclaiming Disability Space in an Ableist Society: A Review of Alice Wong’s Disability VisibilityPsychedelic Strategies; Alternative Phenomenologies, Translations, and Representations of the Human Body in Relation to Interior SpaceCan Technology Open Spaceflight to Disabled Astronauts?“We’ll never have true AI without first understanding the brain”A Unique Way to Analyze the Realities of Health Workers Within A Hermeneutic-Dialectic Perspective‘ … breaks down silos’: allied health clinicians’ perceptions of informal interprofessional interactions in the healthcare workplaceIn praise of cultural … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #136
CPN Digest #135
Something for the weekend: 20th Thinking Qualitatively Virtual ConferenceWomen, Exercise, and Eating Disorder Recovery: The Normal and the PathologicalMichel Foucault, Confessions of the Flesh. The history of sexuality, Volume 4 (2021)Stunning research on inequities of access to online learning in the USAEthical Autoethnography: Is it Possible?Particularizing an Internal Morality of Physical TherapyStories of professional development in physiotherapy education'I am a woman who wants': on disability and desireWriting activities and the hidden curriculum in nursing educationNew journal - Qualitative Research in HealthBook review: Sophie Woodward, Material Methods: Researching and Thinking … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #135
CPN Digest #134
Something for the weekend: Arts PracticaWhat people want from LBP exercise isn’t what they getand thisHealthy and unhealthy exerciseThe concept of ‘illness without disease’ impedes understanding of chronic fatigue syndrome: a response to Sharpe and GrecoThe ‘disenchantment’ of traditional acupuncturists in higher educationEnhancing the employability of disabled graduatesWhy the curriculum should be based on students’ readiness, not their ageThe heutagogy hotchpotch‘This place is not for children like her’: disability, ambiguous belonging and the claiming of disadvantage in postapartheid South AfricaSystematic evaluation of content and quality of English and German pain apps in European … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #134
Is physiotherapy losing touch?
There was an article in The Conversation recently titled After a year of digital learning and virtual teaching, let’s hear it for the joy of real books that gave us another indication of one of the really positive things that might come out of this awful pandemic. Things like people valuing face-to-face meetings again, whilst really appreciating the value of digital connection; people going for walks and gardening; and people reading books again. Perhaps one of the most challenging things for people when they can move freely again will be how comfortable they are being touched by strangers. The Spectator magazine asked recently whether the handshake was dead. Reviewing Ella Al-Shamahi's … [Read more...] about Is physiotherapy losing touch?
CPN Digest #133
Something for the weekend: “We Have No Option But To Carry On, But At What Cost?”: One Physiotherapist Reports From The Covid-19 ICUand thisTreatment Not As Usual: Caring For Rehabilitation Patients Who Are HomelessChronic obstructive pulmonary disease and advance care planning: A synthesis of qualitative literature on patients’ experiencesCritical thinking isn’t just a processBreathtaking: Asthma Care in a Time of Climate ChangeEquity in Access and Use of Rehabilitation Services in CanadaHealthcare Professionals’ Willingness and Preparedness to Work During COVID-19 in Selected Hospitals of Southwest EthiopiaTech helps doctors assess patients’ pain levelsPostures of Transport: Sex, God, … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #133
CPN Digest #132
Something for the weekend: Overdiagnosis and overtreatment: a sociological perspective on tackling a contemporary healthcare issuePosthuman entanglements in a social solidarity clinicUpright and uptight: the invention of postureA Short History of Walkinghyposubjects: on becoming human (Timothy Morton)Body Talk in the Medical Humanities: Whose LanguageThe play cureAn examination of student preference for traditional didactic or chunking teaching strategies in an online learning environmentSite, dance and body“Love Can’t Be Taken to the Hospital. If It Were Possible, It Would Be Better”: Patients’ Experiences of Being Cared for in an Intensive Care UnitHealth inequalities, fundamental … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #132
CPN Digest #131
Something for the weekend: People in the most deprived groups were least likely to take part in the exercise referral schemeChallenge Trials: What Are the Ethical Problems?Growing Up Disabled in AustraliaThe Meaning of “Phenomenology”: Qualitative and Philosophical Phenomenological Research MethodsThe Sociology of Identity: Authenticity, Multidimensionality, and MobilityThe Exhibition Interview Walk (EIW) as a Method: Experimental Research With Objects to Discover How Commons Logics Are PerceivedEarly Illustrations of the Nervous System by Camillo Golgi and Santiago Ramón y CajalThe tyranny of workA New Way to Restore Hand Mobility—With an Electrified PatchBlack methodologies and other … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #131