Added Value Report: University of Westminster Transformation in Students Project. Linceviciute, S., Ridge, Damien T., Smyth, N., Cartwright, T., Sebah, I., Bryant, K. Īdded Value Report: University of Westminster Transformation in Students Project HIV-related stigma in the UK then and now: to what extent are we on track to eliminate stigma? A qualitative investigation. Hedge, B., Devan, K., Catalan, J., Cheshire, A.
HIV-related stigma in the UK then and now: to what extent are we on track to eliminate stigma? A qualitative investigation Barriers and facilitators to engagement with artificial intelligence (AI)-based chatbots for sexual and reproductive health advice: a qualitative analysis. Nadarzynski, Tom, Puentes, Vannesa, Pawlak, Izabela, Mendes, Tania, Montgomery, Ian, Bayley, Jake and Ridge, Damien 2021. īarriers and facilitators to engagement with artificial intelligence (AI)-based chatbots for sexual and reproductive health advice: a qualitative analysis. How older people living with HIV narrate their quality of life: Tensions with quantitative approaches to quality-of-life research. Rosenfeld, D., Anderson, Jane, Catalan, Jose, Delpech, Valerie and Ridge, Damien 2021.
How older people living with HIV narrate their quality of life: Tensions with quantitative approaches to quality-of-life research International Journal for Quality in Health Care. A Qualitative Study Exploring Patient Shadowing as a Method to Improve Patient-Centred Care: Ten Principles for a New Gold Standard. Goodrich, J., Ridge, Damien and Cartwright, Tina 2022. This article raises questions about dominant gay cultural forms, assumptions of gay solidarity, and how ethnic minority men make sense of and negotiate their sexual and social experiences.Ī Qualitative Study Exploring Patient Shadowing as a Method to Improve Patient-Centred Care: Ten Principles for a New Gold Standard Differences and discrimination within Southeast Asian based networks also contributed towards fragmented relations. Men who are not well assimilated face exclusion, invisibility and discrimination. While all men who look for a place to belong on the scene generally feel pressure to assimilate to a predominantly white middle-class gay culture, Southeast Asian men generally had more cultural distance to cover. Fitting into the scene culture involves processes of assimilation, and loss of connection even with supportive ethnic networks. The narratives here reveal fragmented social networks involving various social groups, categories of people and an “In/Out” culture where informants were culturally marginal. This article examines common assumptions behind the notion of “gay community,” contrasting these views with the experiences of homosexual men originating from Southeast Asia on the commercial gay scene in Melbourne, Australia. "Asian" men on the scene: challenges to "gay communities"