Published on in Vol 7, No 1 (2020): Jan-Jun

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/17130, first published .
Web-Based Consumer Health Education About Back Pain: Findings of Potential Tensions From a Photo-Elicitation and Observational Study

Web-Based Consumer Health Education About Back Pain: Findings of Potential Tensions From a Photo-Elicitation and Observational Study

Web-Based Consumer Health Education About Back Pain: Findings of Potential Tensions From a Photo-Elicitation and Observational Study

Journals

  1. Hodges P, Hall L, Setchell J, French S, Kasza J, Bennell K, Hunter D, Vicenzino B, Crofts S, Dickson C, Ferreira M. Effect of a Consumer-Focused Website for Low Back Pain on Health Literacy, Treatment Choices, and Clinical Outcomes: Randomized Controlled Trial. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2021;23(6):e27860 View
  2. Setchell J, Olson R, Turpin M, Costa N, Barlott T, O’Halloran K, Wigginton B, Hodges P. Afflexivity in post-qualitative inquiry: prioritising affect and reflexivity in the evaluation of a health information website. Health Sociology Review 2021;30(3):323 View
  3. O’Brien P, Conley B, Bunzli S, Bullen J, Coffin J, Persaud J, Gunatillake T, Dowsey M, Choong P, Lin I, Suppiah V. Staying moving, staying strong: Protocol for developing culturally appropriate information for Aboriginal people with osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus and gout. PLOS ONE 2021;16(12):e0261670 View
  4. Costa N, Blyth F, Parambath S, Huckel Schneider C. What’s the low back pain problem represented to be? An analysis of discourse of the Australian policy directives. Disability and Rehabilitation 2023;45(20):3312 View