Let's Talk About Sex: Risky Business for Cancer and Palliative Care Clinicians
References
Akkerman D (2004) Cancer, Sensuality, Sexuality and Self Image. ACCIS - On Call Information Sheet, The Cancer Council Victoria, Australia, 1-6.
Anderson BL, Woods XA and Copeland LJ (1997) Sexual sel-schema and sexual morbidity among gynaecologic cancer survivors. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 65: 221-229.
Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing (2003) Psychosocial Care Guidelines: A World First.
Bazely P and Richards L (2000) The NVivo Qualitative Project Book, Sage, London.
Butler L, Banfield V, Terry S and Allen K (1998) Conceptualising sexual health in cancer care, Western Journal of Nursing Research 20: 683-699.
Chamberlain Wilmoth M (2001) The aftermath of breast cancer: An altered sexual self. Cancer Nursing 24: 278-286.
Creswell JW (2003) Research design: Qualitative, Quantitative and Mixed Method Approaches, Sage, California.
Detmar SB, Muller MJ, Liowina DV, Schornagel JH and Aaronson NK (2001) Patient-physician communication during outpatient palliative treatment visits: An observational study. Journal of the American Medical Association 285: 1351-1357.
Ezzy D (2002) Data analysis during data collection. Qualitative analysis: Practice and Innovation. Melbourne, Allen & Unwin.
Giddens A (1991) The Sequestration of Sickness and Death: Modernity and Self Identity. Standford Press, USA.
Giddens A (1992) The Transformation of Intimacy: Sexuality, Love and Eroticism in Modern Societies, Policy Press, Cambridge.
Giddens A (1993) The Nature of Modernity: Modernity and Self-Identity, Love and Sexuality, MacMillan Press, London.
Giddens A (1999) Frequently asked questions (FAQs). London School of Economics. Retrieved from http://www.lse.ac.uk/Giddens/FAQs.htm.

eContent Home




