John Oliffe
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ADVICE AND INSIGHTS FROM UBC FACULTY ON REACHING OUT TO SUPERVISORS
These videos contain some general advice from faculty across UBC on finding and reaching out to a potential thesis supervisor.
Supervision Enquiry
Great Supervisor Week Mentions
It's #greatsupervisor week at #UBC and I want to thank Dr. John Oliffe @MensHealthUBC for challenging me to think critically and creatively.
Graduate Student Supervision
Doctoral Student Supervision
Dissertations completed in 2010 or later are listed below. Please note that there is a 6-12 month delay to add the latest dissertations.
Background: The mental health of young immigrant and refugee men has drawn much recent attention worldwide. Increased awareness regarding depression and suicide among men has intersected with pressing dialogues around how to best address the health needs of immigrant and refugee populations. Despite this attention, integrated knowledge translation (iKT) research in the field of mental health has yet to engage this group and virtually no studies have focused on their mental health experiences. The purpose of this research was to examine mental health and distress from the perspectives of immigrant and refugee young men living in Greater Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Methods: An iKT approach was applied to integrate the perspectives of (1) research collaborators, who were six immigrant and refugee young men, and (2) an advisory group, comprised of service providers and program leaders into the study design and mobilization of the study findings. Narrative analysis methods, informed by the analytical lenses of social context and critical masculinities, were used to collect and examine the data from individual and group interviews with thirty-three immigrant and refugee young men (ages 15-22 years). Participatory video methods were used to facilitate the co-creation of a film with the collaborators based on qualitative data from the research interviews. A reflexive analysis was used to examine ethnographic field notes documenting the iKT design and the participatory video methods.Findings: The results reveal that (1) the participants’ distress-related experiences were shaped in part by masculine discourses; (2) experiences of second-class citizenship, in the context of their everyday life, influenced how young men perceived their mental health; and (3) iKT and participatory video methods can lead to new insights about power and representation. Conclusions: This dissertation contributes to the literature on immigrant and refugee youth mental health and young men’s experiences of distress. It provides insights to guide future iKT and participatory video research. The findings can inform equity-oriented practice, policy, and future research to support the mental health of immigrant and refugee young men in Canada.
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The objective of this study was to explore the connections between men’s experiences of work, prostate cancer and radical prostatectomy to develop a grounded theory that describes the processes used by participants to reformulate the worker identity. The research questions that guided the study were:1.How does screening and diagnosis of prostate cancer affect men and their work? and 2. How are participants’ work-related experiences affected following radical prostatectomy? Digitally recorded, in-depth, individual interviews were conducted with 24 English speaking men who were working at the time of prostate cancer diagnosis and subsequently underwent radical prostatectomy. Constructivist grounded theory guided collection and analysis of the data. A masculinities framework highlighted the ways in which gender shaped participants’ experiences. Findings suggest that work was central to participants’ masculine identities and was an activity that benefited men and their families. Related to this, finding prostate cancer emerged as a threat to most men’s health and work, and a stark reminder of their mortality. Choosing radical prostatectomy was viewed as necessary in treating the disease to ensure survival. In preparing the workplace for their absence due to surgery, men made sick leave arrangements with the aim of minimizing disruptions to workplace productivity. The basic social process of Reformulating the Worker Identity after radical prostatectomy was developed. Results indicate that men reformulated worker identities to accommodate treatment side-effects and challenges for fully resuming work responsibilities. This process comprised two parts. First, recovering after radical prostatectomy allowed men to restore physical strength to resume daily activities through processes that included embodying the sick role, contesting side-effects, and conceding new realities wherein men drew on masculine ideals of resilience and responsibility for solving one’s problems, and by reconciling the changes surgery had imposed on their lives. Second, in re-negotiating work expectations, men adjusted work responsibilities to facilitate their return to work by assessing work capacity, re-balancing work and health, and re-setting work obligations, wherein men reevaluated the importance of work in relation to emergent health needs and lobbied for return to work accommodations needed to sustain ongoing recovery.
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Smoke-free grounds policies (SFGPs) were introduced in acute psychiatric hospital settings to help improve health among patients, staff, and visitors. However, enacting these policies has been challenging. Recognizing that cultural norms around tobacco use may influence policy enactment, a qualitative ethnographic study was undertaken in Northern British Columbia, Canada to improve understandings about how SFGPs are affected by institutional cultures. Data included participant observation, document analysis, informal fieldwork discussions (n=11), and interviews with patients (n=20), healthcare professionals (n=19), and key informants (n=2) at two hospitals. Data were analyzed using iterative processes to inductively derive thematic findings and develop cultural understandings. Cultural factors supported some healthcare professionals in subverting and resisting the SFGP while advocating and caring for patients. Strong consultative leadership, including input and participation by those most directly responsible for policy implementation, offered the strongest indication that policy-maker intent could be implemented. This study highlights the actions taken and challenges faced by those implementing SFGPs in inpatient psychiatric settings. Consistency in implementing the SFGP across the organization was a significant challenge, influenced by local context, the nature of the policy, resource availability, and healthcare professional discretion under the policy. Patients responded to the SFGP in a variety of ways, but ultimately remained resigned to smoking and believed hospitals had a duty to accommodate them and their smoking. The centrality of smoking was rooted in personal beliefs sustained by both healthcare professionals and patients, and enforced through group norms. The study offers new evidence about the importance of local and cultural contexts to SFGP implementation and reports for the first time how rurality may influence SFGP implementation in psychiatric settings in Canada. Local contexts and cultural factors can be conceptualized in a socio-ecological model of intra-personal, inter-personal, institutional factors, and community/environment spheres of influence, to structure inquiry and analysis of SFGP implementation. It is suggested that policy-makers avoid oversimplified macro-level approaches to SFGP development and implementation in favour of more localized, simultaneous, top-down, bottom-up approaches, with accompanying support for those most directly involved in implementation efforts to improve policy fidelity and any needed shift of cultural norms.
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Master's Student Supervision
Theses completed in 2010 or later are listed below. Please note that there is a 6-12 month delay to add the latest theses.
No abstract available.
No abstract available.
No abstract available.
Despite many health promotion efforts to reduce or stop women’s smoking during pregnancy and postpartum, less attention has focused on fathers’ smoking behaviours. This qualitative study examined interviews conducted with 20 new fathers to describe the connections between gender relations and men’s smoking during their partners’ pregnancy and the postpartum period. In addressing the question of what fathers’ perceive as their partners’ strategies to assist them to reduce or quit smoking, three key themes were identified: Supporting autonomy in men’s smoking cessation, nagging to challenge men’s freedom to smoke, and contempt for men’s continued smoking. In addressing the question of how heterosexual gender relations influence fathers’ masculine ideals in the context of smoking, two themes were identified: Reconciling to maintain a smoke-free home and smoking to mediate relationships. Social constructionist gender frameworks were used to theorize the findings. The results reveal the importance of constructing tobacco reduction and smoking cessation as a fathering responsibility amid trading on masculine ideals by appealing to men’s autonomy, willpower and strength to be smoke-free.
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Men’s depression is a complex health care issue in Canadian society. Depression has negative impacts on many aspects of men’s lives including work performance, school achievement and relationship success. Adherence to hegemonic masculine ideals including strength and self-reliance lead some men to keep depression hidden amid broader social stigma whereby mental health challenges are often equated with weakness. Heterosexual men who experience depression rely heavily on relationship support from their women partners and often refuse to seek help from health care providers or engage with public health services. In order for men’s depression services to be effective, they must celebrate hegemonic masculine values including leadership and strength while acknowledging the key role women partners play in encouraging depressed men to seek help. Results include how depressed men go to great lengths to keep it hidden, attempt self-management, say that they want help but seldom make efforts to seek it, rely heavily on their women partners for support, make efforts to shield women partners from the most negative aspects of their condition and acknowledge that their women partners are critical to their recovery.
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Background: Suicide is a serious health concern worldwide. In 2007, almost 4,000 Canadians took their own lives and among older and middle-age groups, suicide is one of the leading causes of death for both men and women. Given the far-reaching impact on families and societies, suicide has been widely studied; yet, accounts about the connections between suicide and culture in the context of immigrant populations are still poorly understood. Objective: To better understand the connections between suicide and culture, and to provide a foundation on which to build targeted culturally-sensitive suicide prevention programs, this research used qualitative research method to describe the perception and experiences of suicide of fifteen Korean-Canadian immigrants.Results: Three inductively derived themes were identified to detail the study findings: 1) perceptions of and attitudes toward suicide among Korean-Canadian immigrants; 2) narratives around the causes and triggers of their suicidal thoughts and behaviours; and 3) manifestations of and strategies to manage their suicidal thoughts and behaviours. Within these three themes, there are a total of nine sub-themes which are intricately connected. Discussion: While recognising and embodying stigma around suicide, participants understood the hopelessness and despair that could drive immigrants toward suicide. Causes and triggers for suicidal thoughts most often emerged from academic pressures, estranged family, and dis-identities – all of which were intricately connected to participants’ immigration experiences. Noteworthy were deeply embedded Confucian values, which could exert an array of influences on Korean-Canadians. In addition, extensively discussed were dis-identity experiences whereby a sense of self and as well as collectivist familial bonds were challenged, and suicidal ideation could flow toward and/or from these changes. Many participants were unaware of mental health services and programs amid being challenged by language barriers when they did access mental health services. While, it is critical for healthcare providers to understand immigrant patients’ cultural background to fully assess their risk for suicide, also urgently needed are targeted efforts to raise public awareness about suicide and educate immigrants about professional and self-help options to manage their mental health and well-being.
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Male nurses can bring energy and knowledge along with diverse beliefs and values to their workplaces. When taking care of dying patients, male ICU nurses may also have an array of issues concerning comfort care, and their unique ways of coping with stress that can accompany such events. Male ICU nurses also have distinct ways for maintaining their well-being and for sustaining their masculine ideals when caring for dying patients and working in a female-dominated environment. Many research studies have focused on how nurses care for dying patients, but few studies have explored the experiences of male ICU nurses caring for dying patients. The current study addresses this significant knowledge gap and provides valuable insights on how male ICU nurses connect masculine ideals with stress coping strategies in a female-dominated environment. Using an interpretive descriptive qualitative approach, this study provides understandings of male ICU nurses’ struggles and feelings when they witness their patients’ death. The findings indicated that most participants drew on masculine ideals to act as providers in meeting the needs of the patients and their families. That said, most participants also transgressed some masculine ideals by expressing their feelings, such as shedding tears at the bedside and talking about their emotions to help reduce stress. Many participants also reported appreciating their life and their families more after witnessing patients’ death. They also used effective strategies to cope with the stress in their lives and workplace. Furthermore, participants believed that they were equals to the female nurses both in terms of competency and in their ability to care for patients and families. Finally, this study also enhances opportunity to learn how to increase understanding in supporting male ICU nurses at their workplaces.
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Few authors have specifically analyzed college men’s help-seeking for depression. Those studies that have focused on the relationship between college men’s attitudes towards seeking psychological help and the male gender role are limited in that they neglect to contextualize help-seeking behaviours. Earlier studies have also assumed that all college men adhere to traditional masculine ideals in their help-seeking decision-making. This qualitative study analyzed 21 interviews with college men who self-reported as having either clinical depression or symptoms of depression. In acknowledging the multiplicity of masculinities, this study used social constructionism to explore the way in which college men enact their masculinities in various help-seeking contexts for depression-related symptoms. Four key themes were identified: conforming to social norms, maintaining stoicism and limiting self-disclosure around friends and peers, family validating the need for professional help, and preserving autonomy. This study also examined the interplay between college men’s masculinities and their perception of help-seeking for depression symptoms. The findings demonstrate the college men’s masculine ideals surrounding help-seeking for mental illnesses.
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News Releases
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Men can click their way to better health (11 Jun 2020)
Publications
- ‘We're welcomed into people's homes every day’ versus ‘we're the people that come and arrest you’: The relational production of masculinities and vulnerabilities among male first responders (2022)
Sociology of Health & Illness, - “Appreciate the Little Things”: A Qualitative Survey of Men’s Coping Strategies and Mental Health Impacts During the COVID-19 Pandemic (2022)
American Journal of Men's Health, - Australian men's initial pathways into mental health services (2022)
Health Promotion Journal of Australia, 33 (2), 460--469 - Examining the Role of Traditional Masculinity and Depression in Men’s Risk for Contracting COVID-19 (2022)
Behavioral Sciences, 12 (3), 80 - Experiences of female partners of prostate cancer survivors: A systematic review and thematic synthesis (2022)
Health & Social Care in the Community, - Job Satisfaction and Psychological Distress among Help-Seeking Men: Does Meaning in Life Play a Role? (2022)
Behavioral Sciences, - Mapping Men’s Mental Health Help-Seeking After an Intimate Partner Relationship Break-Up (2022)
Qualitative Health Research, , 104973232211109 - Masculinity and mental illness in and after men's intimate partner relationships (2022)
SSM - Qualitative Research in Health, 2, 100039 - Men building better relationships: A scoping review (2022)
Health Promotion Journal of Australia, - Men’s anxiety, why it matters, and what is needed to limit its risk for male suicide (2022)
Discover Psychology, 2 (1) - Men’s Experiences of Mental Illness Stigma Across the Lifespan: A Scoping Review (2022)
American Journal of Men's Health, 16 (1), 155798832210747 - Men’s preferences for therapist gender: Predictors and impact on satisfaction with therapy (2022)
Counselling Psychology Quarterly, , 1--17 - Men’s Shame and Anger: Examining the Roles of Alexithymia and Psychological Distress (2022)
The Journal of Psychology, - Sleep Health in Male-dominated Workplaces: A Qualitative Study Examining the Perspectives of Male Employees (2022)
Behavioral Sleep Medicine, , 1--17 - Social Disconnection and Psychological Distress in Canadian Men During the COVID-19 Pandemic (2022)
American Journal of Men's Health, - Suicide by hanging: A scoping review (2022)
International Journal of Mental Health Nursing, - Suicide risk, psychological distress and treatment preferences in men presenting with prototypical, externalising and mixed depressive symptomology (2022)
Journal of Mental Health, , 1--8 - Teaching Gender Competency with Men in Mind: Foundations of an Online Training Program for Mental Health Practitioners (2022)
The Journal of Men’s Studies, 30 (1), 111--131 - The acceptability, effectiveness and gender responsiveness of participatory arts interventions in promoting mental health and Wellbeing: a systematic review (2022)
Arts & Health, - The Gendered Dimensions of Photovoice in Men’s Health Promotion Research (2022)
Health Promotion Practice, - An Evaluation of 5-Year Web Analytics for HeadsUpGuys: A Men’s Depression E-Mental Health Resource (2021)
American Journal of Men's Health, - Associations Between Uncertainty Stress, Life Stress and Internet Addiction Among Medical Students (Preprint) (2021)
- Can you picture it? Photo elicitation in qualitative cardiovascular health research (2021)
European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing, - Challenges working with men: Australian therapists' perspectives (2021)
Journal of Clinical Psychology, - Challenging assumptions about what men want: Examining preferences for psychotherapy among men attending outpatient mental health clinics. (2021)
Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, 52 (1), 28--33 - Depression and Suicide Literacy among Canadian Sexual and Gender Minorities (2021)
Archives of Suicide Research, - How men step back – and recover – from suicide attempts: A relational and gendered account (2021)
Sociology of Health & Illness, 43 (1), 238--252 - How to Save a Life: Vital Clues From Men Who Have Attempted Suicide (2021)
Qualitative Health Research, 31 (3), 415--429 - Men’s Dropout From Mental Health Services: Results From a Survey of Australian Men Across the Life Span (2021)
American Journal of Men's Health, - Men’s Physical Activity and Sleep Following a Workplace Health Intervention: Findings from the POWERPLAY STEP Up challenge (2021)
American Journal of Men's Health, - Promoting Men’s Health With the “Don’t Change Much” e-Program (2021)
American Journal of Men's Health, - Psychosocial impact of the COVID-19 pandemic: a cross-sectional study of online help-seeking Canadian men (2021)
Postgraduate Medicine, , 1--10 - Screening Older Adult Men for Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm: A Scoping Review (2021)
American Journal of Men's Health, - Segmenting or Summing the Parts? A Scoping Review of Male Suicide Research in Canada (2021)
The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, , 070674372110006 - The Anxiety Depression Pathway Among Men Following a Prostate Cancer Diagnosis: Cross-Sectional Interactions Between Anger Responses and Loneliness (2021)
American Journal of Men's Health, - Zoom Interviews: Benefits and Concessions (2021)
International Journal of Qualitative Methods, , 160940692110535 -
The Cost of Bottling It Up: Emotion Suppression as a Mediator in the Relationship Between Anger and Depression Among Men with Prostate Cancer
(2020)
Cancer Management and Research, - A longitudinal evaluation of web analytics for HeadsUpGuys: A men’s depression e-mental health resource (Preprint) (2020)
- A qualitative investigation of mental health promotion among aging gay men (2020)
Journal of Mental Health, , 1--7 - Help-seeking prior to male suicide: Bereaved men perspectives (2020)
Social Science & Medicine, 261, 113173 - HPV Vaccine and College-Age Men: A Scoping Review (2020)
American Journal of Men's Health, - Inequities in depression within a population of sexual and gender minorities (2020)
Journal of Mental Health, 29 (5), 573--580 - Mapping Canadian Men’s Recent and Intended Health Behavior Changes Through the Don’t Change Much Electronic Health Program (2020)
Journal of Medical Internet Research, 22 (5), e16174 - Prostate Cancer Treatment and Work: A Scoping Review (2020)
American Journal of Men's Health, - Reciprocity, Autonomy, and Vulnerability in Men’s Experiences of Informal Cancer Care (2020)
Qualitative Health Research, , 104973231985596 - Reformulating the Worker Identity: Men’s Experiences After Radical Prostatectomy (2020)
Qualitative Health Research, , 104973231882515 - Shame and guilt mediate the effects of alexithymia on distress and suicide-related behaviours among men (2020)
Psychology, Health & Medicine, , 1--8 - Suicidality, maladaptive externalizing behaviors and sexual orientation: Results from an online representative sample of Canadian men (2020)
International Journal of Mental Health, - “I Never Saw a Future”: Childhood Trauma and Suicidality Among Sexual Minority Women (2019)
Qualitative Health Research, , 104973231984350 - Comparison of Developers’ and End-Users’ Perspectives About Smoking Cessation Support Through the Crush the Crave App (2019)
JMIR mHealth and uHealth, - Eating Disorders in Males: How Primary Care Providers Can Improve Recognition, Diagnosis, and Treatment (2019)
American Journal of Men's Health, - Mapping Canadian Men’s Recent and Intended Health Behavior Changes Through the Don’t Change Much Electronic Health Program (Preprint) (2019)
- Stigma in the bereavement experiences of gay men who have lost a partner to suicide (2019)
Culture, Health & Sexuality, , 1--17 - Strategies for Supporting Smoking Cessation Among Indigenous Fathers: A Qualitative Participatory Study (2019)
American Journal of Men's Health, 13 (1), 155798831880643 - Suicide Prevention From the Perspectives of Gay, Bisexual, and Two-Spirit Men (2019)
Qualitative Health Research, , 104973231881608 - Unpacking Social Isolation in Men’s Suicidality (2019)
Qualitative Health Research, - Using Photovoice to Understand Suicidality Among Gay, Bisexual, and Two-Spirit Men (2019)
Archives of Sexual Behavior, 48 (5), 1529--1541 - “Do You Want to Go Forward or Do You Want to Go Under?” Men’s Mental Health in and Out of Prison (2018)
American Journal of Men's Health, 12 (5), 1235--1246 - A Guide to Multisite Qualitative Analysis (2018)
Qualitative Health Research, , 104973231878670 - Alexithymia, suicidal ideation and health-risk behaviours: a survey of Canadian men (2018)
International Journal of Psychiatry in Clinical Practice, , 1--3 - Combining intersectionality and syndemic theory to advance understandings of health inequities among Canadian gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (2018)
Critical Public Health, , 1--13 - Comparison of Developers’ and End-Users’ Perspectives About Smoking Cessation Support Through the Crush the Crave App (Preprint) (2018)
- Men on Losing a Male to Suicide: A Gender Analysis (2018)
Qualitative Health Research, 28 (9), 1383--1394 - Recent Suicide Attempts Across Multiple Social Identities Among Gay and Bisexual Men: An Intersectionality Analysis (2018)
Journal of Homosexuality, , 1--20 - The Crush the Crave Quit Smoking App and Young Adult Smokers: Qualitative Case Study of Affordances (2018)
JMIR mHealth and uHealth, - A Content Analysis of Health and Safety Communications Among Internet-Based Sex Work Advertisements: Important Information for Public Health (2017)
Journal of Medical Internet Research, - Advocacy, Support and Survivorship in Prostate Cancer (2017)
European Journal of Cancer Care, - Assessing the Feasibility, Acceptability and Potential Effectiveness of an Integrated Approach to Smoking Cessation for New and Expectant Fathers: The Dads in Gear Study Protocol (2017)
Contemporary Clinical Trials, - Chinese Immigrant Men Smokers’ Sources of Cigarettes in Canada: A Qualitative Study (2017)
Tobacco Induced Diseases, - The Crush the Crave Quit Smoking App and Young Adult Smokers: Qualitative Case Study of Affordances (Preprint) (2017)
- “Dulling the Edges”: Young Men’s Use of Alcohol to Deal with Grief Following the Death of a Friend (2016)
Health Education & Behavior, - A Men’s Workplace Health Intervention: Results of the POWERPLAY Program Pilot Study (2016)
Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, - A Qualitative Study on Chinese Canadian Male Immigrants’ Perspectives on Stopping Smoking: Implications for Tobacco Control in China (2016)
American Journal of Men’s Health, - Addressing Underrepresentation in Sex Work Research: Reflections on Designing a Purposeful Sampling Strategy (2016)
Qualitative Health Research, - Canadian Nurses' Perspectives on Prostate Cancer Support Groups: A Survey Study (2016)
Cancer Nursing, - Changes in Men’s Physical Activity and Healthy Eating Knowledge and Behavior as a Result of Program Exposure: Findings from the Workplace POWERPLAY Program (2016)
Journal of Physical Activity and Health, - Childhood Traumas Among Men Attending Outpatient Psychiatric Services (2016)
International Journal of Mental Health & Addictions, - Community Development and Older Men’s Programming: An International Case Study (2016)
International Journal of Community Development, - Discourses of Masculinity, Femininity, and Sexuality in Uganda’s Stand Proud, Get Circumcised Campaign (2016)
Culture, Health, and Sexuality, - Evaluation of QuitNow Men: An Online, Men-Centered Smoking Cessation Intervention (2016)
Journal of Medical Internet Research, - Experiences of Australian and New Zealand New Nursing and Midwifery Graduates Looking for Employment (2016)
International Journal of Nursing Practice, - Improving Psychosocial Health in Men with Prostate Cancer Through an Intervention that Reinforces Masculine Values – Exercise (2016)
Psycho-Oncology, - Integrating Gender and Sex to Unpack Trends in Sexually Transmitted Infection Surveillance Data in British Columbia, Canada: An Ethno-Epidemiological Study (2016)
BMJ Open, - Male Body Practices: Pitches, Purchases & Performativities (2016)
American Journal of Men’s Health, - Measurement and Evaluation Practices of Factors That Contribute to Effective Health Promotion Collaboration Functioning: A Scoping Review (2016)
Evaluation and Program Planning, - Men’s Depression and Suicide Literacy: A Nationally Representative Canadian Survey (2016)
Journal of Mental Health, - Men’s Mental Health – Spaces and Places that Work for Men (2016)
Canadian Family Physician, - Photovoice in Mental Illness Research: A Review and Recommendations (2016)
Health: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine, - Psychosocial Oncology Supports for Men: A Scoping Review and Recommendations (2016)
American Journal of Men’s Health, - Stigma in Male Depression and Suicide: A Canadian Sex Comparison Study (2016)
Community Mental Health Journal, - Strengthening Population Health Interventions: Developing the CollaboraKTion Framework for Community-Based Knowledge Translation (2016)
Healthy Research Policy and Systems, - The Case for Retaining a Focus on Masculinities in Men’s Health Research (2016)
International Journal of Men’s Health, - The Role of Masculinity in Men’s Help-seeking for Depression: A Systematic Review (2016)
Clinical Psychology Review, - Understanding the Meaning and Role of Gifts Given to Ugandan Mothers in Maternity Care Settings: “The Help They Give When They’ve Seen How Different You Are” (2016)
Sociology of Health and Illness, - Who Switches from Regular to Light Cigarettes? A Study of Six Provincial Capital Cities in China (2016)
Public Health, - “If I Were Nick”: Men’s Responses to an Interactive Video Drama Series to Support Smoking Cessation (2015)
Journal of Medical Internet Research, - A Comparative Study of Australian and New Zealand Male and Female Nurses’ Health: A Sex Comparison and Gender Analysis (2015)
American Journal of Men’s Health, - A Qualitative Study of Chinese Canadian Fathers’ Smoking Behaviors: Intersecting Cultures and Masculinities (2015)
BMC Public Health, - An Updated Review of Interventions that Include Promotion of Physical Activity for Adult Men (2015)
Sports Medicine, - Connecting Leisure-Time Physical Activity and Quality of Sleep to Nurses Health: Data from the e-Cohort Study of Nurses and Midwives (2015)
Journal of Nursing & Care, - Environmental Smoking Restrictions and Light Cigarette Adoption among Chinese Urban Smokers (2015)
Prevention Science, - Fathers on Child’s Play: Urban and Rural Canadian Perspectives (2015)
Men and Masculinities, - Fathers’ Views on Their Financial Situations, Father-Child Activities, and Preventing Child Injuries (2015)
American Journal of Men’s Health, - Heterosexual Couples and Prostate Cancer Support Groups: A Gender Relations Analysis (2015)
Supportive Care in Cancer, - Impact of Prostate Cancer Treatment on the Sexual Quality of Life for Men-Who-Have-Sex-With-Men (2015)
Journal of Sexual Medicine, 12 (12), 2378--2386 - It’s a Sentence, Not a Word: Insights from a Keyword Analysis in Cancer Communication (2015)
Qualitative Health Research, - Knowledge Translation in Men’s Health Research: Development and Delivery of Content for Use Online (2015)
Journal of Medical Internet Research, - Korean-Canadian Immigrants’ Help-seeking and Self-management of Suicidal Behaviours (2015)
Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health, - Living for the Moment: Men Situating Risk-Taking after the Death of a Friend (2015)
Sociology of Health and Illness, - Male Depression and Suicide: What NPs Should Know (2015)
Nurse Practitioner, - Male ICU Nurses’ Experiences of Taking Care of Dying Patients and Their Families: A Gender Analysis (2015)
American Journal of Men’s Health, - Masculinity and Fatherhood: New Fathers’ Perceptions of Their Female Partners’ Efforts to Assist Them to Reduce or Quit Smoking (2015)
American Journal of Men’s Health, - Measuring Masculinity in the Context of Chronic Disease (2015)
Psychology of Men and Masculinity, - Men, Masculinities and Hemophilia (2015)
American Journal of Men’s Health, - Men, Masculinities and Murder-Suicide (2015)
American Journal of Men's Health, - Men’s Responses to Online Smoking Cessation Resources for New Fathers: The Influence of Masculinities (2015)
Journal of Medical Internet Research, - Migration and Young People’s Mental Health in Canada: A Scoping Review (2015)
Journal of Mental Health, - On Manhood and Movember... or Why the Moustache Works (2015)
Global Health Promotion, - Picture Me Smokefree: A Qualitative Study Using Social Media and Digital Photography to Engage Young Adults in Tobacco Reduction and Cessation (2015)
Journal of Medical Internet Research, - Prostate Cancer Support Groups: Canada-Based Specialists’ Perspectives (2015)
American Journal of Men’s Health, - Repackaging Prostate Cancer Support Group Research Findings: An e-KT Case Study (2015)
American Journal of Men’s Health, - Sexuality and Exercise in Men Undergoing Androgen Deprivation Therapy for Prostate Cancer (2015)
Supportive Care in Cancer, - The POWERPLAY Workplace Physical Activity and Nutrition Intervention for Men: Study Protocol and Baseline Characteristics (2015)
Contemporary Clinical Trials, - Understanding Male Cancer Patients' Barriers to Participating in Cancer Rehabilitation (2015)
European Journal of Cancer Care, - Who Smokes in Smoke-free Public Places in China? Findings from a 21 City Survey (2015)
Health Education Research, - The Value of Prostate Cancer Support Groups: A Pilot Study of Primary Physicians' Perspectives (2014)
BMC Family Practice, - Beyond Workers' Compensation: Men’s Mental Health In and Out of Work (2014)
American Journal of Men’s Health, - College Men’s Depression-Related Help-Seeking: A Gender Analysis (2014)
Journal of Mental Health, - Designing Tailored Messages About Smoking and Breast Cancer: A Focus Group Study with Youth (2014)
Canadian Journal of Nursing Research, - Gay Men and Intimate Partner Violence: A Gender Analysis (2014)
Sociology of Health and Illness, - Gender, Smoking and Tobacco Reduction and Cessation: A Scoping Review (2014)
International Journal for Equity in Health, - Health Care Professionals Implementing a Smoke-Free Policy at Inpatient Psychiatric Units (2014)
Qualitative Health Research, - Heterosexual Gender Relations and Masculinity in Fathers who Smoke (2014)
Research in Nursing & Health, - Surviving Men's Depression: Women Partners' Perspectives (2014)
Health: An Interdisciplinary Journal, - The Male Face of Caregiving: A Scoping Review of Men Caring for a Person with Dementia (2014)
American Journal of Men’s Health, - The Marketing of Better-For-You Health Products in the Emergent Issue of Men’s Obesity (2014)
Health Sociology Review, - Treatment Preferences among Men Attending Outpatient Psychiatric Services (2014)
Journal of Mental Health, - Understanding Help-Seeking Among Depressed Men (2014)
Psychology of Men and Masculinities, - "It is just not part of the culture here": Young adults' photo-narratives about smoking, quitting, and healthy lifestyles in Vancouver, Canada (2013)
Health & Place, 22, 19-28 - After the death of a friend: Young Men's grief and masculine identities (2013)
Social Science & Medicine, 84, 35-43 - Changing Communication Needs and Preferences Across the Cancer Care Trajectory: Insights from the Patient Perspectives (2013)
Supportive Care in Cancer, - Communicating shared decision-making: Cancer patient perspectives (2013)
Patient Education and Counseling, 90 (3), 291-296 - Communication challenges for chronic metastatic cancer in an era of novel therapeutics. (2013)
Qualitative health research, 23 (7), 863-75 - Culture and Suicide: Korean-Canadian Immigrants’ Perspectives (2013)
Ethnicity and Inequalities in Health and Social Care, - Faux masculinities among college men who experience depression (2013)
Health, 17 (1), 75-92 - From promotion to cessation: masculinity, race, and style in the consumption of cigarettes, 1962-1972. (2013)
American journal of public health, 103 (4), e44-55 - Heteronormativity hurts everyone: Experiences of young men and clinicians with sexually transmitted infection/HIV testing in British Columbia, Canada (2013)
Health, 17 (5), 441-459 - Heterosexual Gender Relations in and Around Childhood Risk and Safety (2013)
Qualitative Health Research, - Looking for Mr. PG: Masculinities and men's depression in a northern resource-based Canadian community (2013)
Health & Place, 21, 94-101 - Male farmers with mental health disorders: A scoping review (2013)
Australian Journal of Rural Health, 21 (1), 3-7 - MASCULINITIES AND MARGINALIZED YOUNG MEN'S PATTERNS OF ACCESSING HEALTH CARE SERVICES (2013)
Journal of Adolescent Health, 52 (2), S21 - Masculinities and Patient Perspectives of Communication About Active Surveillance for Prostate Cancer (2013)
Health Psychology, 32 (1), 83-90 - Men Managing Cancer: A Gender Analysis (2013)
Sociology of Health & Illness, - Men on Fathering in the Context of Children's Unintentional Injury Prevention (2013)
American Journal of Mens Health, 7 (1), 77-86 - Moving Beyond the Prostate: Benefits in Broadening the Scope of Research on Men and Cancer (2013)
American Journal of Mens Health, 7 (2), 138-141 - Perceptions of cannabis as a stigmatized medicine: a qualitative descriptive study (2013)
Harm Reduction Journal, 10 - Poor Communication in Cancer Care: What It Is and What to Do About It (2013)
Cancer Nursing, - Qualitative research on suicide in East Asia: A scoping review (2013)
Journal of Mental Health, 22 (4), 372-383 - Reconciling Parenting and Smoking in the Context of Child Development (2013)
Qualitative Health Research, 23 (8), 1042-1053 - Sex and Straight Young Men: Challenging and Endorsing Hegemonic Masculinities and Gender Regimes (2013)
Men and Masculinities, - Students’ Experiences of Prison Health Education during Medical School (2013)
Medical Teacher, - Suicide among East Asians in North America: A scoping review (2013)
Journal of Mental Health, 22 (4), 361-371 - Tobacco and the invention of quitting: a history of gender, excess and will-power (2013)
Sociology of Health & Illness, 35 (5), 778-792 - Women on men's sexual health and sexually transmitted infection testing: a gender relations analysis (2013)
Sociology of Health & Illness, 35 (1), 1-16 - "You feel like you can't live anymore": Suicide from the perspectives of Canadian men who experience depression (2012)
Social Science & Medicine, 74 (4), 506-514 - A narrative review of South Asian patients' experiences of cardiac rehabilitation (2012)
Journal of Clinical Nursing, 21 (1-2), 149-159 - An overlooked majority: HIV-positive gay men who smoke (2012)
Journal of Mens Health, 9 (1), 17-24 - Association Between Mobility, Participation, and Wheelchair-Related Factors in Long-Term Care Residents Who Use Wheelchairs as Their Primary Means of Mobility (2012)
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 60 (7), 1310-1315 - Canadian Punjabi Sikh men's experiences of lifestyle changes following myocardial infarction: cultural connections (2012)
Ethnicity & Health, 17 (3), 253-266 - Community voices in program development: the wisdom of individuals with incarceration experience. (2012)
Canadian journal of public health = Revue canadienne de sante publique, 103 (5), e379-83 - Fatherhood, Smoking, and Secondhand Smoke in North America: An Historical Analysis With a View to Contemporary Practice (2012)
American Journal of Mens Health, 6 (2), 146-155 - From the Physician to the Marlboro Man: Masculinity, Health, and Cigarette Advertising in America, 1946-1964 (2012)
Men and Masculinities, 15 (5), 526-547 - Gender Influences in Tobacco Use and Cessation Interventions (2012)
Nursing Clinics of North America, 47 (1), 55-+ - Grey spaces: the wheeled fields of residential care (2012)
Sociology of Health & Illness, 34 (3), 315-329 - Masculinities, 'guy talk' and 'manning up': a discourse analysis of how young men talk about sexual health (2012)
Sociology of Health & Illness, 34 (8), 1246-1261 - Men's discourses of help-seeking in the context of depression (2012)
Sociology of Health & Illness, 34 (3), 345-361 - Priorities for research in child maltreatment, intimate partner violence and resilience to violence exposures: results of an international Delphi consensus development process (2012)
Bmc Public Health, 12 - Punjabi Sikh Patients' Perceived Barriers to Engaging in Physical Exercise Following Myocardial Infarction (2012)
Public Health Nursing, 29 (6), 534-541 - Smokeless Tobacco: a Gender Analysis and Nursing Focus (2012)
Nursing Clinics of North America, 47 (1), 149-+ - Supporting fathers' efforts to be smoke-free: program principles. (2012)
The Canadian journal of nursing research = Revue canadienne de recherche en sciences infirmieres, 44 (3), 64-82 - The Gender(s) in the Room (2012)
Qualitative Health Research, 22 (4), 435-440 - Young people's perspectives on the use of reverse discourse in web-based sexual-health interventions (2012)
Culture Health & Sexuality, 14 (9), 1065-1079 - "He's more typically female because he's not afraid to cry": Connecting heterosexual gender relations and men's depression (2011)
International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 10 (4), 478-479 - Considerations of Keyword Analysis as an Adjunct to Qualitative Interpretations of Gender Difference in Cancer Communication (2011)
International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 10 (4), 462-463 - Faux Hegemony: Masculine Identities among College Men who Experience Depression (2011)
International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 10 (4), 472-473 - Gender relations and health research: a review of current practices (2011)
International Journal For Equity in Health, 10 - Gender relations, prostate cancer and diet: Re-inscribing hetero-normative food practices (2011)
Social Science & Medicine, 72 (9), 1499-1506 - Health Effects of Using Cannabis for Therapeutic Purposes: A Gender Analysis of Users' Perspectives (2011)
Substance Use & Misuse, 46 (6), 769-780 - Health, Illness, Men and Masculinities (HIMM): a theoretical framework for understanding men and their health (2011)
Journal of Mens Health, 8 (1), 7-15 - Influence of gender and income in shaping parental negotiations about preventing children's injuries (2011)
International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 10 (4), 482 - Locating fatherhood: Exploring the ways that place and space influence father's consideration of risk, safety and supervision (2011)
International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 10 (4), 485-486 - Men and depression (2011)
Canadian Family Physician, 57 (2), 153-155 - Men, Food, and Prostate Cancer: Gender Influences on Men's Diets (2011)
American Journal of Mens Health, 5 (2), 177-187 - Men's smoking cessation interventions: a brief review (2011)
Journal of Mens Health, 8 (2), 100-108 - Picture Me, Smokefree? - Young adults' photographs about smoking and quitting (2011)
International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 10 (4), 561-562 - Predictors of Mobility Among Wheelchair Using Residents in Long-Term Care (2011)
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 92 (10), 1587-1593 - Prostate cancer support groups, health literacy and consumerism: Are community-based volunteers re-defining older men's health? (2011)
Health, 15 (6), 555-570 - Sex differences in smoking cessation outcomes of a tailored program for individuals with substance use disorders and mental illness (2011)
Addictive Behaviors, 36 (5), 523-526 - Suicide From the Perspectives of Older Men Who Experience Depression: A Gender Analysis (2011)
American Journal of Mens Health, 5 (5), 444-454 - THE UNMET HEALTH NEEDS OF YOUNG MEN WHO TRADE SEX FOR MONEY OR GOODS (2011)
Journal of Adolescent Health, 48 (2), S101 - Using photo-elicitation methods to understand fathers' attitudes towards injury and risk (2011)
International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 10 (4), 521-522 - 'Not the swab!' Young men's experiences with STI testing (2010)
Sociology of Health & Illness, 32 (1), 57-73 - 'The missing picture': tobacco use through the eyes of smokers (2010)
Tobacco Control, 19 (3), 206-212 - Androgen Deprivation Therapy for Prostate Cancer: Recommendations to Improve Patient and Partner Quality of Life (2010)
Journal of Sexual Medicine, 7 (9), 2996-3010 - Beyond generational differences: a literature review of the impact of relational diversity on nurses' attitudes and work (2010)
Journal of Nursing Management, 18 (8), 948-969 - Connecting Masculinity and Depression Among International Male University Students (2010)
Qualitative Health Research, 20 (7), 987-998 - Fathers: Locating Smoking and Masculinity in the Postpartum (2010)
Qualitative Health Research, 20 (3), 330-339 - Health promotion and illness demotion at prostate cancer support groups. (2010)
Health promotion practice, 11 (4), 562-71 - Helpful communications during the diagnostic period: an interpretive description of patient preferences (2010)
European Journal of Cancer Care, 19 (6), 746-754 - HETERONORMATIVITY HURTS EVERYONE EXPERIENCES OF YOUNG MEN AND CLINICIANS WITH STI TESTING (2010)
Journal of Mens Health, 7 (3), 301-302 - ISMH World Congress 2010 Abstract 022 YOU FEEL LIKE YOU CAN T LIVE ANYMORE SUICIDE FROM THE PERSPECTIVES OF MEN WHO EXPERIENCE DEPRESSION (2010)
Journal of Mens Health, 7 (3), 288 - ISMH World Congress 2010 Abstract 024 SUICIDE FROM THE PERSPECTIVES OF OLDER MEN WHO EXPERIENCE DEPRESSION (2010)
Journal of Mens Health, 7 (3), 289 - ISMH World Congress 2010 Abstract 030 CONNECTING MASCULINTIES AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AMONG SENIOR SOUTH ASIAN CANADIAN IMMIGRANT MEN (2010)
Journal of Mens Health, 7 (3), 290-291 - ISMH World Congress 2010 Abstract 031 MASCULINITIES DIET AND SENIOR PUNJABI SIKH IMMIGRANT MEN FOOD FOR WESTERN THOUGHT? (2010)
Journal of Mens Health, 7 (3), 291 - Knowledge Translation and Qualitative Research: The Tao of Puzzles (2010)
International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 9 (4), 375 - Manning up for men's mental illness (2010)
Australian Family Physician, 39 (12), 931-932 - MASCULINITIES AND COLLEGE MEN S DEPRESSIONS RECURSIVE RELATIONSHIPS (2010)
Journal of Mens Health, 7 (3), 293 - Masculinities and college men's depression: Recursive relationships (2010)
Health Sociology Review, 19 (4), 465-477 - Masculinities, diet and senior Punjabi Sikh immigrant men: food for Western thought? (2010)
Sociology of Health & Illness, 32 (5), 761-776 - MEN S DEPRESSION THE GENDER INFLUENCES IMPACTS AND EXPECTATIONS IN HETEROSEXUAL COUPLES (2010)
Journal of Mens Health, 7 (3), 293 - Men's business, women's work: gender influences and fathers' smoking (2010)
Sociology of Health & Illness, 32 (4), 583-596 - Men's health in Canada: a 2010 update (2010)
Journal of Mens Health, 7 (3), 189-192 - Prostate cancer, masculinity and food. Rationales for perceived diet change (2010)
Appetite, 55 (3), 398-406 - Snakes and Ladders: Tripartite Challenges of Translating, Transcribing, and Accuracy Checking Qualitative Interviews (2010)
International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 9 (4), 359 - Suicide From the Perspectives of Older Men Who Experience Depression (2010)
International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 9 (4), 376 - The Intersections of Masculinity and Work among Older Men who Experience Depression (2010)
Qualitative Health Research, - Theorising masculinities and men's health: A brief history with a view to practice (2010)
Health Sociology Review, 19 (4), 409-418 - Tobacco use patterns in traditional and shared parenting families: a gender perspective (2010)
Bmc Public Health, 10 - TRANSLATING DESCRIPTIVE KNOWLEDGE INTO MEN CENTRED INTERVENTIONS - IMAGINE (2010)
Journal of Mens Health, 7 (3), 298-299 - Unclean fathers, responsible men: Smoking, stigma and fatherhood (2010)
Health Sociology Review, 19 (4), 522-533 - Connecting humor, health, and masculinities at prostate cancer support groups (2009)
Psycho-Oncology, 18 (9), 916-926 - Factors Influencing Men Undertaking Active Surveillance for the Management of Low-Risk Prostate Cancer (2009)
Oncology Nursing Forum, 36 (1), 89-96 - Fathers' narratives of reducing and quitting smoking (2009)
Sociology of Health & Illness, 31 (2), 185-200 - Grief and groups: Considerations for the treatment of depressed men (2009)
Journal of Mens Health, 6 (4), 295-298 - Health Behaviors, Prostate Cancer, and Masculinities A Life Course Perspective (2009)
Men and Masculinities, 11 (3), 346-366 - Men's health promotion in Canada: Current context and future direction (2009)
Health Education Journal, 68 (4), 266-272 - Mixed Methods Research in Occupational Therapy: A Survey and Critique (2009)
Otjr-Occupation Participation and Health, 29 (1), 14-23 - Nursing instructors' and male nursing students' perceptions of undergraduate, classroom nursing education (2009)
Nurse Education Today, 29 (6), 649-653 - Patient Real-Time and 12-Month Retrospective Perceptions of Difficult Communications in the Cancer Diagnostic Period (2009)
Qualitative Health Research, 19 (10), 1383-1394 - Prostate cancer stories in the Canadian print media: representations of illness, disease and masculinities (2009)
Sociology of Health & Illness, 31 (2), 155-169 - The Readings of Smoking Fathers: A Reception Analysis of Tobacco Cessation Images (2009)
Health Communication, 24 (6), 532-547 - The Self-Management of Uncertainty Among Men Undertaking Active Surveillance for Low-Risk Prostate Cancer (2009)
Qualitative Health Research, 19 (4), 432-443 - The Social Context for Psychological Distress from Iatrogenic Gynecomastia with Suggestions for Its Management (2009)
Journal of Sexual Medicine, 6 (4), 989-1000 - Youth's experiences with STI testing in four communities in British Columbia, Canada (2009)
Sexually Transmitted Infections, 85 (5), 397-401 - Analyzing participant produced photographs from an ethnographic study of fatherhood and smoking (2008)
Research in Nursing & Health, 31 (5), 529-539 - How Prostate Cancer Support Groups Do and Do Not Survive: British Columbian Perspectives (2008)
American Journal of Mens Health, 2 (2), 143-155 - Men, depression and masculinities: A review and recommendations (2008)
Journal of Mens Health, 5 (3), 194-202 - Understanding men and health: Masculinities, identity and well-being (2008)
American Journal of Mens Health, 2 (2), 190-191 - Women and prostate cancer support groups: The gender connect? (2008)
Social Science & Medicine, 66 (5), 1217-1227 - "Truth telling" and cultural assumptions in an era of informed consent (2007)
Family & Community Health, 30 (1), 5-15 - Elderly South Asian Canadian immigrant men - Confirming and disrupting dominant discourses about masculinity and men's health (2007)
Family & Community Health, 30 (3), 224-236 - Further than the eye can see? Photo elicitation and research with men (2007)
Qualitative Health Research, 17 (6), 850-858 - Men treated for prostate cancer did not consider urinary, bowel, or sexual dysfunction as problems of health. (2007)
Evidence-based nursing, 10 (1), 32 - Men, masculinities, and prostate cancer: Australian and Canadian patient perspectives of communication with male physicians (2007)
Qualitative Health Research, 17 (2), 149-161 - Being screened for prostate cancer - A simple blood test or a commitment to treatment? (2006)
Cancer Nursing, 29 (1), 1-8 - Embodied masculinity and androgen deprivation therapy (2006)
Sociology of Health & Illness, 28 (4), 410-432 - Innovative Practice: Ethnography and Men’s Health Research (2006)
The Journal of Men's Health & Gender, - Men's constructions of smoking in the context of women's tobacco reduction during pregnancy and postpartum (2006)
Social Science & Medicine, 62 (12), 3096-3108 - Perceived barriers and benefits were factors in decision making about colorectal screening. (2006)
Evidence-based nursing, 9 (1), 31 - Untitled (2006)
Medical Teacher, 28 (4), 390 - Constructions of masculinity following prostatectomy-induced impotence (2005)
Social Science & Medicine, 60 (10), 2249-2259 - Fatherhood and smoking: How men justify their tobacco use (2005)
Oncology Nursing Forum, 32 (1), 179 - Integrating problem-based learning to interprofessional education curricula using the Corbin and Strauss' illness trajectory model: student evaluations and faculty experiences. (2005)
Journal of interprofessional care, 19 (2), 172-3 - Men Interviewing Men about Health and Illness: Ten Lessons Learned (2005)
Journal of Men’s Health and Gender, - Why not ethnography? (2005)
Urologic nursing, 25 (5), 395-9 - Anglo-Australian Masculinities and Trans Rectal Ultrasound Prostate Biopsy (TRUS-Bx): Connections and Collisions (2004)
International Journal of Men’s Health, - Transrectal ultrasound prostate biopsy (TRUS-Bx): patient perspectives. (2004)
Urologic nursing, 24 (5), 395-400 - Active consideration underpinned the efforts of men with prostate cancer to support their spouse caregivers. (2003)
Evidence-based nursing, 6 (1), 31
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