that was identified rapidly through non-systematic searching. This involved forward citation and related article searches for studies already known to the research team. Following this, title-abstract-key term searches were performed on Scopus and PsycINFO, along with supplementary Google Scholar searches. Specific journals, such as Sociology of Health and Illness and Social Science and Medicine, were also searched
living with Long Covid. Sociology of Health and Illness 12 June 2024. Funding:This study was funded by the NIHR Long COVID Programme. Conflicts of Interest:No relevant conflicts were declared. Full disclosures are available on the original paper. Disclaimer:Summaries on NIHR Evidence are not a substitute for professional medical advice. They provide information about research which is funded
is associated with greater uptake of treatment and greater weight loss. National Institute for Health and Care Research School for Primary Care Research and the Foundation for the Sociology of Health and Illness.
of Psychiatrists.Berwick D (1989) Continuous improvement as an ideal in health care. New England Journal of Medicine, 320: 53–6.Brown B, Crawford P, Gilbert P, et al (2014) Practical compassions: reper-toires of practice and compassion talk in acute mental healthcare. Sociology of Health and Illness, 36: 383–99.Cole-King A, Gilbert P (2011) Compassionate care: the theory and the reality. Journal of Holistic Healthcare
Fifty years of sociological leadership at Social Science and Medicine. In this review article, we examine some of the conceptual contributions of sociology of health and illness over the past fifty years. Specifically, we focus on research dealing with medicalization, the management of stigma, research on adherence and compliance, and patient-doctor interaction. We show how these themes
for the development of this review arose from a Foundation of Sociology of Health and Illness (FSHI) funded research development project, which engaged with over 80 people across the UK. Many of whom were people with learning disabilities, who described experiences of coercion and abuse in their own reproductive lives. These are long standing problems which negatively impact on the reproductive rights of people
Sociology of Health and Illness 34(1): 95-113) showing how psychiatrists apply pressure to seek agreement in consultations and wonder if psychiatrists really want assertive knowledgeable patients who disagree with them? The concern then is that how truly shared is decision making in shared decision making and if it comes to be seen as a vehicle of compliance how will patients respond
. Literature searches of three electronic databases (CINAHL, Medline, and PubMed) and two journals (Time and Society, Sociology of Health and Illness) were carried out in 2011 using the following search terms (and derivatives): chronic illness AND time AND consumer OR carer. The search was aimed at finding studies of time spent on HRA. A scoping literature review method was utilised. Twenty-two peer reviewed