Items where Greenwich Author is "Gale, Elizabeth"
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Article
Gale, Elizabeth (2022) Using Heideggerian hermeneutic phenomenology for midwifery research studies. The Practising Midwife, 25 (1). pp. 8-10. ISSN 1461-3123
Reeves, J., Gale, L., Webb, J., Delaney, R. and Cocklin, N. (2009) Focusing on young men: developing integrated services for young fathers. Community practitioner : the journal of the Community Practitioners' & Health Visitors' Association, 82 (9). pp. 18-21. ISSN 1462-2815
Book Section
Gale, Liz (2008) A father is born: the role of the midwife in involving young fathers in the birth and early parenting of their children. In: Reeves, Jane, (ed.) Inter-professional approaches to young fathers. M&K publishing, Keswick, Cumbria, UK. ISBN 9781905539291
Conference or Conference Paper
Gale, Elizabeth (2022) Hermeneutic phenomenology to maintain focus upon participant involvement. In: The Royal College of Midwives Education and Research Conference 2022, 23rd - 24th March 2022, Coventry. (Unpublished)
Gale, Elizabeth (2020) Heideggerian hermeneutic phenomenology and the use of crafted stories in interpreting the meaning of transition to parenting amongst couples with an IVF pregnancy. In: The Royal College of Midwives Research Conference 2020, 11 March 2020, Leeds. (Unpublished)
Gale, Liz (2016) Infertile parents and identity. In: Parenting and Personhood: Cross-cultural perspectives on family-life, expertise and risk management, 23-24 June 2016, University of Kent. (Submitted)
Gale, Liz (2015) Life is a rollercoaster: Social influences on couples conceiving a child through IVF. In: Making Parents? Human reproduction and family life in contemporary society, 11/12/2015, University of Roehampton. (Submitted)
Gale, L. (2007) An Uneven Playing Field? The medicalisation of pregnancy and the ‘risk management’ of postnatal support. In: International Conference - Monitoring Parents; Childbearing in the age of Intensive Parenting, 21-22 May 2007, University of Kent, Canterbury. (Unpublished)
Thesis
Gale, Elizabeth (2021) Returning to the Path. A hermeneutic phenomenological study of parental expectations and the meaning of transition to early parenting in couples with a pregnancy conceived using in-vitro fertilisation. PhD thesis, Institute for Lifecourse Development: Centre for Vulnerable Children and Families.