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Original Articles

Research Note: The LIVITY study: research challenges and strategies for engaging with the black caribbean community in a study of HIV infection

Pages 197-209 | Received 10 Nov 2005, Accepted 23 Aug 2007, Published online: 08 Jun 2009

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Mark Adley, Hayley Alderson, Katherine Jackson, William McGovern, Liam Spencer, Michelle Addison & Amy O’Donnell. (2023) Ethical and practical considerations for including marginalised groups in quantitative survey research. International Journal of Social Research Methodology 0:0, pages 1-16.
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Articles from other publishers (5)

Sarah B. Schwarz, Liesl Nydegger & Mandy J. Hill. (2023) Hard-to-Reach or Hardly Reached? The “Difficulty” of Engaging Cisgender Black Females in Sexual Health Research. Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities 10:6, pages 2615-2619.
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Olufikayo O. Bamidele, Helen E. McGarvey, Briege M. Lagan, Frank Chinegwundoh, Nasreen Ali & Eilis McCaughan. (2018) “Hard to reach, but not out of reach”: Barriers and facilitators to recruiting Black African and Black Caribbean men with prostate cancer and their partners into qualitative research. European Journal of Cancer Care, pages e12977.
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Billie Bonevski, Madeleine Randell, Chris Paul, Kathy Chapman, Laura Twyman, Jamie Bryant, Irena Brozek & Clare Hughes. (2014) Reaching the hard-to-reach: a systematic review of strategies for improving health and medical research with socially disadvantaged groups. BMC Medical Research Methodology 14:1.
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Clemon George, Lydia Makoroka, Winston Husbands, Barry D. Adam, Robert Remis, Sean Rourke & Stanley Read. (2013) Sexual health determinants in black men-who-have-sex-with-men living in Toronto, Canada. Ethnicity and Inequalities in Health and Social Care 6:4, pages 151-162.
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S M Gerver, P J Easterbrook, M Anderson, I Solarin, G Elam, K A Fenton, G Garnett & C H Mercer. (2011) Sexual risk behaviours and sexual health outcomes among heterosexual black Caribbeans: comparing sexually transmitted infection clinic attendees and national probability survey respondents. International Journal of STD & AIDS 22:2, pages 85-90.
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