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Original Articles

‘Pick me up and not a down down, up up’: how are the identities of people with aphasia represented in aphasia, stroke and disability websites?

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Pages 753-768 | Published online: 01 Oct 2010

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (5)

Helena Taubner, Malin Hallén & Åsa Wengelin. (2020) Still the same? – Self-identity dilemmas when living with post-stroke aphasia in a digitalised society. Aphasiology 34:3, pages 300-318.
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Annette Rotherham, Tami Howe & Gina Tillard. (2015) “We just thought that this was Christmas”: perceived benefits of participating in aphasia, stroke, and other groups. Aphasiology 29:8, pages 965-982.
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Jacqueline Hinckley, Erika Boyle, Diane Lombard & Lori Bartels-Tobin. (2014) Towards a consumer-informed research agenda for aphasia: preliminary work. Disability and Rehabilitation 36:12, pages 1042-1050.
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Rozanne Barrow. (2008) Listening to the voice of living life with aphasia: Anne's story. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders 43:sup1, pages 30-46.
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Elizabeth Armstrong & Hanna Ulatowska. (2007) Making stories: Evaluative language and the aphasia experience. Aphasiology 21:6-8, pages 763-774.
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Articles from other publishers (13)

Becky Moss, Jane Marshall, Celia Woolf & Katerina Hilari. (2023) Can a writing intervention using mainstream Assistive Technology software compensate for dysgraphia and support reading comprehension for people with aphasia?. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders.
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Alejandro Brice & Jacqueline Hinckley. (2022) Building Research Initiatives by Developing Group Effort (BRIDGE): Patient-Partners in Aphasia Research. Seminars in Speech and Language 43:05, pages 426-444.
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Sue Sherratt. (2022) Communication and Swallowing Disorders: The Effects of Climate Change. Perspectives of the ASHA Special Interest Groups 7:1, pages 245-258.
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Helena Taubner, Malin Hallén & Åsa Wengelin. (2017) Signs of aphasia: Online identity and stigma management in post-stroke aphasia. Cyberpsychology: Journal of Psychosocial Research on Cyberspace 11:1.
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Elsa Ngai Hung & Ben Ming Fai Law. (2015) The Therapeutic Use of Individual Story Book in Group Context. Illness, Crisis & Loss 23:1, pages 59-73.
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Mary-Pat O Malley-Keighran & Mary Coleman. (2014) ‘I am not a tragedy. I am full of hope’: communication impairment narratives in newspapers. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders 49:2, pages 174-188.
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Juliana Thompson & Margo Mckeever. (2014) The impact of stroke aphasia on health and well-being and appropriate nursing interventions: an exploration using the Theory of Human Scale Development. Journal of Clinical Nursing 23:3-4, pages 410-420.
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Berit Arnesveen Bronken, Marit Kirkevold, Randi Martinsen & Kari Kvigne. (2012) The Aphasic Storyteller. Qualitative Health Research 22:10, pages 1303-1316.
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Marit Kirkevold, Berit A. Bronken, Randi Martinsen & Kari Kvigne. (2012) Promoting psychosocial well-being following a stroke: Developing a theoretically and empirically sound complex intervention. International Journal of Nursing Studies 49:4, pages 386-397.
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BRIAN PETHERAM & PAM ENDERBY. 2008. Handbook of the Neuroscience of Language. Handbook of the Neuroscience of Language 427 432 .
Barbara B. Shadden & Fran Hagstrom. (2007) The Role of Narrative in the Life Participation Approach to Aphasia. Topics in Language Disorders 27:4, pages 324-338.
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Bev Bennett. (2007) Gaining understanding from patients' stories to inform neuroscience nursing practice. British Journal of Neuroscience Nursing 3:7, pages 308-312.
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AF Bingley, E McDermott, C Thomas, S Payne, JE Seymour & D Clark. (2016) Making sense of dying: a review of narratives written since 1950 by people facing death from cancer and other diseases. Palliative Medicine 20:3, pages 183-195.
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