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1. 'And that was her choice': Dutch general practitioners' perceptions of the autonomy of patients with non-western migration backgrounds who experience domestic violence.

2. Doing peer work in mental health services: Unpacking different enactments of lived experiences.

3. Temporalities of peer support: the role of digital platforms in the 'living presents' of mental ill-health.

4. Situational expectations and surveillance in families affected by dementia: organising uncertainties of ageing and cognition.

5. Temporalities of emergency: the experiences of Indigenous women with traumatic brain injury from violence waiting for healthcare and service support in Australia.

6. 'It's a cultural thing': excuses used by health professionals on providing inclusive care.

7. Leaky bodies, vaccination and three layers of memory: bio-immune, social-collective and lived experience.

8. Conceptualising the continuum of female genital fashioning practices.

9. Healing journeys: experiences of young Aboriginal people in an urban Australian therapeutic community drug and alcohol program.

10. Professional identity and epistemic stress: complementary medicine in the academy.

11. Professionalism and person-centredness: developing a practice-based approach to leadership within NHS maternity services in the UK.

12. Interprofessional role boundaries in diabetes education in Australia.

13. Epistemic cultures in complementary medicine: knowledge-making in university departments of osteopathy and Chinese medicine.

14. Public and private families: a comparative thematic analysis of the intersections of social norms and scrutiny.

15. Social class, teachers, and medicalisation lag: a qualitative investigation of teachers' discussions of ADHD with parents and the effect of neighbourhood-level social class.

16. Negotiating trust and struggling for control: everyday narratives of unwanted disclosure of HIV status among people with HIV in Australia.

17. Body as choice or body as compulsion: An experiential perspective on body-self relations and the boundary between normal and pathological.

18. Building community, one swipe at a time: hook-up apps and the production of intimate publics between women.

19. Harm reduction and the ethics of drug use: contemporary techniques of self-governance.

20. Degrees of difference: The politics of classifying international medical graduates.

21. From poverty to poor health: Analysis of socio-economic pathways influencing health status in rural households of Ghana.

22. The differential incorporation of CAM into the medical establishment: The case of acupuncture and homeopathy in Portugal.

23. On being credibly ill: Class and gender in illness stories among welfare officers and clients with medically unexplained symptoms.

24. 'They know better than we doctors do': providers' preparedness for transgender healthcare in Vietnam.

25. Unsettling knowledge boundaries: the Indigenous pitiki space for Basotho women's sexual empowerment and reproductive well-being.

26. Is living well with dementia a credible aspiration for spousal carers?

27. 'She's done two and that's harsh': The agency of infants with congenital conditions as invoked through parent narratives.

28. Injured teachers' experiences of the Victorian workers' compensation stress claims process: Adversarial and alienating.

29. Agents in time: Representations of chronic illness.

30. New age orientalism: Ayurvedic 'wellness and spa culture.'.

31. Health, freedom and work in rural Victoria: The impact of labour market casualisation on health and wellbeing.

32. Everyday trajectories of hearing correction.

33. Clinical self-tracking and monitoring technologies: negotiations in the ICT-mediated patient–provider relationship.

34. Are we fit yet? English adolescent girls’ experiences of health and fitness apps.

35. Embodying policy-making in mental health: the implementation of Partners in Recovery.

36. Rehabilitating the sick role: the experiences of high-risk women who undergo risk reducing breast surgery.

37. The experience of living with chronic illness for the haemodialysis patient: An interpretative phenomenological analysis.

38. The subjective experience of Polynesians in the Australian health system.

39. Challenging homogenous representations of rural youth through a reconceptualisation of young rural Tasmanian's sexual health strategies.

40. It hinges on the door: Time, spaces and identity in Australian Aboriginal Health Services.

41. Are new forms of professionalism emerging in medicine? The case of the implementation of NICE guidelines.

42. Contracts in the English NHS: Market levers and social embeddedness.

43. The work of nurses in private health: Accounting for the intangibles in care delivery.

44. The slide to pragmatism: A values-based understanding of 'dangerous' personality disorders.

45. 'Culture it's a big term isn't it'? An analysis of child and family health nurses' understandings of culture and intercultural communication.

46. 'The 'buck' stops with me' - reconciling men's lay conceptualisations of responsibility for health with men's health policy.

47. Being 'thick' indicates you are eating, you are healthy and you have an attractive body shape: Perspectives on fatness and food choice amongst Black and White men and women in Canada.

48. The healthcare field as a marketplace: general practitioners, pharmaceutical companies, and profit-led prescribing in Pakistan.

49. All-cause mortality risk for men and women in the United States: the role of partner's education relative to own education.

50. Professional perspectives on serodiscordant family service provision in the context of blood-borne viruses.