scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P2093 | author name string | Annette J Browne | |
Sheryl Reimer-Kirkham | |||
Jane McCall | |||
P2860 | cites work | Postcolonial nursing scholarship: from epistemology to method | Q35188212 |
Access and utilization of HIV treatment and services among women sex workers in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. | Q36272823 | ||
The Cedar Project: historical trauma, sexual abuse and HIV risk among young Aboriginal people who use injection and non-injection drugs in two Canadian cities | Q37446601 | ||
A study of the experiences of women living with HIV/AIDS in Uganda | Q38883722 | ||
The leisure experiences of older US women living with HIV/AIDS. | Q39271403 | ||
In search of a healing place: Aboriginal women in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside | Q39640993 | ||
The protective effects of community involvement for HIV risk behavior: a conceptual framework | Q40637549 | ||
Reframing women's risk: social inequalities and HIV infection | Q41464488 | ||
Social suffering: relevance for doctors | Q42786974 | ||
Prevalence and correlates of untreated human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection among persons who have died in the era of modern antiretroviral therapy | Q45710860 | ||
Perceived social support and HIV/AIDS medication adherence among African American women | Q46887011 | ||
Stigma: a health barrier for women with HIV/AIDS. | Q47321407 | ||
Riting" cultural safety within the postcolonial and postnational feminist project: toward new epistemologies of healing | Q47379940 | ||
Describing an explanatory model of HIV illness among aboriginal women | Q47436686 | ||
Rethinking cultural safety while waiting to do fieldwork: methodological implications for nursing research | Q47444695 | ||
Motherhood in the context of maternal HIV infection | Q48566130 | ||
Dirty, diseased and undeserving: the positioning of HIV positive women. | Q50993277 | ||
Quality of life in HIV-infected individuals receiving antiretroviral therapy is related to adherence. | Q51931076 | ||
Reconceptualizing native women's health: an "indigenist" stress-coping model. | Q51958601 | ||
The Cedar Project: A comparison of HIV-related vulnerabilities amongst young Aboriginal women surviving drug use and sex work in two Canadian cities | Q57671760 | ||
P433 | issue | 12 | |
P304 | page(s) | 1769-1782 | |
P577 | publication date | 2009-12-01 | |
P1433 | published in | Qualitative Health Research | Q7268689 |
P1476 | title | Struggling to survive: the difficult reality of Aboriginal women living with HIV/AIDS. | |
P478 | volume | 19 |
Q39958794 | Access to Primary Care From the Perspective of Aboriginal Patients at an Urban Emergency Department |
Q91887515 | Engagement in Maximally-Assisted Therapy and Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy Among a Cohort of Indigenous People Who Use Illicit Drugs |
Q35240664 | Enhancing measurement of primary health care indicators using an equity lens: An ethnographic study. |
Q40358579 | Experiences of chronic stress and mental health concerns among urban Indigenous women |
Q26866215 | HIV Among Indigenous peoples: A Review of the Literature on HIV-Related Behaviour Since the Beginning of the Epidemic |
Q48639012 | Inequalities in determinants of health among Aboriginal and Caucasian persons living with HIV/AIDS in Ontario: results from the Positive Spaces, Healthy Places Study. |
Q88933035 | Viral suppression and viral rebound among young adults living with HIV in Canada |
Q40249270 | Visibility and Voice: Aboriginal People Experience Culturally Safe and Unsafe Health Care. |
Q58808221 | ‘It’s a very isolating world’: the journey to HIV care for women living with HIV in British Columbia, Canada |
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