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Exploring the health care experiences of women diagnosed with vulvodynia
Lauren Templeman
,
Judith Eberhardt
, Jonathan Ling
SSSHL Psychology
Research output
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Contribution to journal
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Article
›
peer-review
270
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Keyphrases
Women's Experiences
100%
Experience of Care
100%
Vulvodynia
100%
Living with
28%
Healthcare Workers' Perceptions
28%
Gender Discrimination
28%
Healthcare Settings
14%
Chronic Pain
14%
United Kingdom
14%
Lived Experience
14%
Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis
14%
Healthcare Professionals
14%
Negative Experiences
14%
Comorbidity
14%
Pain Management
14%
Seeking Help
14%
Underrepresentation
14%
Healthcare
14%
Well-being
14%
Psychological Factors
14%
Mental Health
14%
Positive Experiences
14%
Patient Perception
14%
Intimate Relationships
14%
Improved Outcomes
14%
Healthcare Training
14%
Specific Interventions
14%
Generalisability
14%
Clinical Translation
14%
Professional Training
14%
Patient Health Care
14%
Effective Care
14%
Seeking Care
14%
Heterosexual Women
14%
Self-guidance
14%
Relationship Interventions
14%
Health Professional Education
14%
Psychology
Healthcare
100%
Healthcare Professional
100%
Discrimination
66%
Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis
33%
Chronic Pain
33%
Mental Health
33%
Psychological Factor
33%
Comorbidity
33%
Lived Experience
33%
Overrepresentation
33%
Self-Guidance
33%
Misdiagnosis
33%
Wellbeing
33%
Nursing and Health Professions
Health Service
100%
Vulvodynia
100%
Health Care Personnel
42%
Chronic Pain
14%
Analgesia
14%
Lived Experience
14%
Mental Health
14%
Psychological Aspect
14%
Diagnostic Error
14%
Comorbidity
14%