Something for the weekend: The body in pictures Resisting big data exploitation in public healthcare The practice of phenomenology: The case of Max van Manen The placebo paradox More ways than one to environmental action Physiotherapy history projects around the world Living with Parkinson’s - finding optimism The Lived Experience of People With Stroke After Participation in a Complex Psychosocial Intervention Valuing Care and Support in an Era of Celebrating Independence 7th International Conference on Qualitative Research in Sport and Exercise The healing touch of the king Disability Identity and the Culture of Veteran Athletics in Modern America ‘Old age is a ceremony of … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #53
CPN Digest #52
Something for the weekend: AI physiotherapists and physiotechnologistsPain Rescue Team Helps Seriously Ill Kids Cope In Terrible TimesThe humanities in the age of lonelinessDisability and the myth of the independent scientistEverything We Learned About Women’s Anatomy from Male AuthorsThe “inconvenient truth” about AI in healthcareNeed some bionic shorts to help with your running?Skin mattersDisrupted breath, songlines of breathlessnessSymbiotically considering ‘therapeutic’ human-animal relationsThe great university con: how the British degree lost its valueYou can’t replace the GP with an algorithm – so don’t try toBlow to 10,000-hour rule as study finds practice doesn't always make … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #52
CPN Digest #51
Something for the weekend: A novel near‐peer reflective writing workshopHenry A. Giroux and the Culture of Neoliberal FascismWhy women are more likely to have dodgy hip implants or other medical devicesLA Review of Books celebrates Habermas New CauseHealth book in progress - Dispositions and the Clinical Encounter ‘X-rays don't tell lies’: the Medical Research Council and the measurement of respiratory disability, 1936–1945The Legacies and Limits of The Body in PainMaterial Medicine: Objects, and BodiesOn pain as a distinct sensationWhat Have We Learned from Critical Qualitative Inquiry about Race Equity and Social Justice? The tyranny of the ideal womanThe designer who changed children’s … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #51
CPN Digest #50
Something for the weekend: We can cut private health insurance costs by fixing how we pay for hip replacements and other implants A very cool, free online citation manager The consequences of social hierarchies in Brazil Telling people to be more physically active isn’t working …and we’re not actually busier than we were years ago Why philosophy of science? The research replication crisis in science Everything we need is already out there - so what’s the future of public education? The Dissident Interview: A Deterritorializing Guerrilla Encounter Medical manipulations and the history of physiotherapy from Kay Nias at the Wellcome Global Transformations in the Life Sciences, … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #50
CPN Digest #49
Something for the weekend: A Defense of the Phenomenological Account of Health and Illness Disrupted breath, songlines of breathlessness: an interdisciplinary response The Pedestrian Speech Acts of British Gujarati Indian Walkers “how medicine, throughout the emergence of QoL, began to expand its gaze beyond the confines of the body to what that body does in daily life” Art of now - Hands Data and Digital Directory: 100 places for public servants to learn for free Disability, Rehabilitation, Welfare Policy and the British Ex-Service Migrant in Australia Jacques Derrida (revised) Robot, heal thyself: scientists develop self-repairing machines Civil War Disability in the Light … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #49
CPN Digest #48
Something for the weekend: A qualitative research synthesis exploring professional touch in healthcare Disabled But Not Really The problem of mindfulness Learning How to Write Successfully from Academic Writers Artificial intelligence and machine learning in clinical development “The best jobs of the future will be those that don't exist today” People are losing trust in health researchers The problem with TED Talks The history of the bicycle A qualitative research synthesis exploring professional touch in healthcare practice Children, Tuberculosis, and the Toronto Sanatorium Posthuman knowledge The Politics of Health: 2020 International Health Humanities Consortium … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #48
CPN Digest #47
Something for the weekend: The Language of Illness and Death on Social Media: An Affective Approach Dog learns new tricks via vibrating vest How the Victorians invented leisure Stop being reasonable Inequality of access to physiotherapy …and an important commentary by Hunt, Cleaver, et al Key Push and Pull Factors Affecting Return to Work Identified by Patients With Long-Term Pain The Medical Profession in Mexico, 1800-1870 A new paper from Rosi Braidotti The problem of conflating correlation with causation ‘I liked having confused, vaguely questioning ideas that then fell apart’ Book list on AI and robotics in healthcare and education Organised sport might not be as … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #47