|
Volumn 14, Issue 10, 2004, Pages 1326-1341
|
The narrative correspondence method: What a follow-up study can tell us about the longer term effect on participants in emotionally demanding research
|
Author keywords
Emotional; Memorial; Research effect; Therapeutic
|
Indexed keywords
ARTICLE;
EMOTION;
FOLLOW UP;
HUMAN;
LONG TERM EXPOSURE;
MEDICAL RESEARCH;
MEMORY;
OUTCOME ASSESSMENT;
PARENTAL ATTITUDE;
PRIORITY JOURNAL;
PUBLICATION;
QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS;
RECALL;
ADULT;
ADULT CHILD;
COST OF ILLNESS;
FAMILY RELATION;
HUMAN RELATION;
MIDDLE AGED;
NEOPLASM;
PARENT;
PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECT;
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH;
RESEARCH SUBJECT;
SOCIAL SUPPORT;
TIME;
VERBAL COMMUNICATION;
WRITING;
ADULT;
ADULT CHILDREN;
COST OF ILLNESS;
FAMILY RELATIONS;
FOLLOW-UP STUDIES;
HUMANS;
MIDDLE AGED;
NARRATION;
NEOPLASMS;
PARENTS;
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH;
RESEARCH SUBJECTS;
RESEARCHER-SUBJECT RELATIONS;
SOCIAL SUPPORT;
TIME FACTORS;
WRITING;
|
EID: 16644384476
PISSN: 10497323
EISSN: 15527557
Source Type: Journal
DOI: 10.1177/1049732304269674 Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (37)
|
References (12)
|