Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

All Outputs (3)

Anticipating, experiencing and overcoming challenges in clinical academic training (2021)
Journal Article
Trusson, D., Barratt, J., & Rowley, E. (2021). Anticipating, experiencing and overcoming challenges in clinical academic training. British Journal of Healthcare Management, 27(8), https://doi.org/10.12968/bjhc.2020.0135

Background This paper builds on studies that have reported on the challenges of pursuing a clinical academic career. Aims This study aims to explore the perceived challenges clinical academic trainees experience, and the ways in which they overc... Read More about Anticipating, experiencing and overcoming challenges in clinical academic training.

Reflexive Self-Identity and Work: Working Women, Biographical Disruption and Agency (2020)
Journal Article
Trusson, D., Trusson, C., & Casey, C. (2020). Reflexive Self-Identity and Work: Working Women, Biographical Disruption and Agency. Work, Employment and Society, https://doi.org/10.1177/0950017020926441

The article examines how women workers reflexively shape their self-identities and work identities following a significant biographical disruption incurred by breast cancer diagnosis and treatment. Based on interviews with 22 women navigating their p... Read More about Reflexive Self-Identity and Work: Working Women, Biographical Disruption and Agency.

A new normal?: Women's experiences of biographical disruption and liminality following treatment for early stage breast cancer (2016)
Journal Article
Trusson, D., Pilnick, A., & Roy, S. (2016). A new normal?: Women's experiences of biographical disruption and liminality following treatment for early stage breast cancer. Social Science and Medicine, 151, 121-129. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.01.011

Increasing numbers of women are surviving breast cancer, but little is known about the long-term implications of having survived a life-threatening illness and living with embodied reminders of its potential to return. Twenty-four women aged between... Read More about A new normal?: Women's experiences of biographical disruption and liminality following treatment for early stage breast cancer.