2016
DOI: 10.7475/kjan.2016.28.1.116
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How do Lung Cancer Patients Experience Stigma?: A Meta-synthesis of Qualitative Studies

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…However, not all qualitative research on stigmatization occurs in the context of an intervention. There are many examples of qualitative studies conducted for the purposes of simply understanding a given population or community’s experience with stigma (for syntheses of qualitative studies on stigma, see e.g., Chambers et al, 2015; Coleman et al, 2017; Jeong et al, 2016; Malterud & Ulriksen, 2011; Wood et al, 2015), and while many qualitative studies do not formally intend to reduce stigma, inadvertently they do. In fact, Mazanderani and Paparini (2015) argue that qualitative research focusing on lived experiences plays a vital role in normalizing stigmatized identities and conditions.…”
Section: Stigma Reductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, not all qualitative research on stigmatization occurs in the context of an intervention. There are many examples of qualitative studies conducted for the purposes of simply understanding a given population or community’s experience with stigma (for syntheses of qualitative studies on stigma, see e.g., Chambers et al, 2015; Coleman et al, 2017; Jeong et al, 2016; Malterud & Ulriksen, 2011; Wood et al, 2015), and while many qualitative studies do not formally intend to reduce stigma, inadvertently they do. In fact, Mazanderani and Paparini (2015) argue that qualitative research focusing on lived experiences plays a vital role in normalizing stigmatized identities and conditions.…”
Section: Stigma Reductionmentioning
confidence: 99%