Introduction to Womens Understanding
Sentence Examples
Discover more insights into Womens Understanding
Keywords frequently search together with Womens Understanding
Narrow sentence examples with built-in keyword filters
Conclusions: Improved labeling can enhance laywomen’s understanding of breast implant safety and can impact decision-making.
Full Text
However, this has seldom included women’s understanding of what a sense of belonging is for them—nor have solutions for fostering belonging been co-created with women.
Full Text
Pregnant women’s understanding of danger signs is an important factor in seeking timely care during emergencies.
Full Text
The empirical cases analysed in this text are women’s understandings of the deaths of Marcus and Noel – two young men who were close to them in different ways.
Full Text
From the quantitative data, we find that all three dimensions of religiosity link to young women’s understandings of sex, reproduction, and contraception in unique ways according to parental education and racial identity.
Full Text
This study aims to explore newly arrived Afghan women’s understandings and perceptions of domestic violence and whether they perceive this as acceptable.
Full Text
This work informed women’s understandings of children’s bodies and the material world.
Full Text
I found that nightlife was an increasingly difficult space to occupy, and that participating could cause tension with the women’s understandings of themselves, their behaviours and their desires in nightlife.
Full Text
Using qualitative interview data, we explore women’s understanding and practices of keeping them.
Full Text
This study explored post-menarcheal women’s understanding about body changes and menarche, preparation for menarche, and related cultural beliefs and practices at menarche.
Full Text
We describe HIV-positive and negative women’s understanding of the benefits of contraception and condoms and their motivations to use them.
Full Text
In its examination of a selection of 18th-century medical treatises and women’s writing, this essay considers a range of context-specific and historically specific medical vocabularies and tries to illuminate the various linguistic registers of physicians’ and women’s understandings and experiences of physio-emotional illness.
Full Text
We explored factors associated with migrant women’s understanding of the information provided by maternity staff, and determined which maternal health topics the women had received insufficient coverage of.
Full Text
For many women the opportunity to feel that their previous experiences had been ‘heard’ was an important but sometimes neglected prelude to the ensuing consultation; 2) Clinical risk dominated narrative - all consultations were dominated by information related to risk; discussion of reasonable alternatives was not always observed and women’s understanding of information was seldom verified making compliance with current law questionable; 3) Parallel narrative - woman-centred experience – for pregnant women social factors such as the place of birth and partner influences were as or more important than considerations of clinical risk yet were often missed by HCPs; 4) Cross cutting narrative - genuine dialogue - we observed variably effective interaction between the clinical (2) and patient (3) narratives influenced by trust and empathy and explicit empowering language by HCPs.
Full Text
Providers appeared to hold an important role in women’s understanding of contraception.
Full Text