# | Title | Journal | Year | Citations |
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1 | Suicide by mass murder: Masculinity, aggrieved entitlement, and rampage school shootings | Health Sociology Review | 2010 | 141 |
2 | Exploring gender identity and community among three groups of transgender individuals in the United States: MTFs, FTMs, and genderqueers | Health Sociology Review | 2008 | 138 |
3 | Trust in the health system: An analysis and extension of the social theories of Giddens and Luhmann | Health Sociology Review | 2008 | 130 |
4 | Theorising masculinities and men’s health: A brief history with a view to practice | Health Sociology Review | 2010 | 130 |
5 | Disability, communication, and life itself in the COVID-19 pandemic | Health Sociology Review | 2020 | 125 |
6 | Training to self-care: fitness tracking, biopedagogy and the healthy consumer | Health Sociology Review | 2017 | 109 |
7 | Introduction: taking stock of medical dominance | Health Sociology Review | 2006 | 107 |
8 | Interprofessional practice and professional identity threat | Health Sociology Review | 2013 | 105 |
9 | The time of their lives? Academic workers in neoliberal time(s) | Health Sociology Review | 2005 | 100 |
10 | It is all about who you know: Social capital and health in low-income communities | Health Sociology Review | 2010 | 98 |
11 | The ill-health assemblage: Beyond the body-with-organs | Health Sociology Review | 2011 | 96 |
12 | Frailty, abjection and the ‘othering’ of the fourth age | Health Sociology Review | 2014 | 94 |
13 | Visibilising clinical work: Video ethnography in the contemporary hospital | Health Sociology Review | 2006 | 93 |
14 | Mobile, wearable and ingestible health technologies: towards a critical research agenda | Health Sociology Review | 2017 | 93 |
15 | Death and mourning in technologically mediated culture | Health Sociology Review | 2007 | 85 |
16 | Are we fit yet? English adolescent girls’ experiences of health and fitness apps | Health Sociology Review | 2017 | 83 |
17 | Self-tracking, health and medicine | Health Sociology Review | 2017 | 80 |
18 | Collaborative health care teams in Canada and the USA: Confronting the structural embeddedness of medical dominance | Health Sociology Review | 2006 | 77 |
19 | Work-family conflict and mental health in newlywed and recently cohabiting couples: a couple perspective | Health Sociology Review | 2015 | 75 |
20 | Legislative hegemony and nurse practitioner practice in rural and remote Australia | Health Sociology Review | 2011 | 74 |
21 | Medical dominance then and now: critical reflections | Health Sociology Review | 2006 | 71 |
22 | A postcolonial analysis of Indigenous cultural awareness training for health workers | Health Sociology Review | 2011 | 71 |
23 | Epistemological challenges to integrative medicine: An anti-colonial perspective on the combination of complementary/alternative medicine with biomedicine | Health Sociology Review | 2010 | 70 |
24 | The sociology of cognitive enhancement: Medicalisation and beyond | Health Sociology Review | 2011 | 68 |
25 | Clinical self-tracking and monitoring technologies: negotiations in the ICT-mediated patient–provider relationship | Health Sociology Review | 2017 | 66 |
26 | Bringing our dying home: How caring for someone at end of life builds social capital and develops compassionate communities | Health Sociology Review | 2012 | 64 |
27 | Understanding and addressing the stigma of mental illness with ethnic minority communities | Health Sociology Review | 2012 | 63 |
28 | The determinants of female circumcision among adolescents from communities that practice female circumcision in two Nairobi informal settlements | Health Sociology Review | 2012 | 59 |
29 | Governing the health of the hybrid self: Integrative medicine, neoliberalism, and the shifting biopolitics of subjectivity | Health Sociology Review | 2008 | 55 |
30 | Unclean fathers, responsible men: Smoking, stigma and fatherhood | Health Sociology Review | 2010 | 55 |
31 | Health by numbers? Exploring the practice and experience of datafied health | Health Sociology Review | 2017 | 55 |
32 | Moorn (Black)? Djardak (White)? How come I don’t fit in Mum? Exploring the racial identity of Australian Aboriginal children and youth | Health Sociology Review | 2009 | 54 |
33 | Covid-19 as a ‘breaching experiment’: exposing the fractured society | Health Sociology Review | 2020 | 53 |
34 | Performing birth in a culture of fear: an embodied crisis of late modernity | Health Sociology Review | 2006 | 52 |
35 | The (im)possibilities of clinical democracy | Health Sociology Review | 2006 | 51 |
36 | Self-support for drug users in the context of harm reduction policy: A lay expertise defined by drug users’ life skills and citizenship | Health Sociology Review | 2009 | 51 |
37 | Death and grief on-line: Virtual memorialization and changing concepts of childhood death and parental bereavement on the Internet | Health Sociology Review | 2012 | 50 |
38 | Active ageing: A right or a duty? | Health Sociology Review | 2013 | 50 |
39 | Aboriginal perspectives of child health and wellbeing in an urban setting: Developing a conceptual framework | Health Sociology Review | 2012 | 49 |
40 | Mathematical models as public troubles in COVID-19 infection control: following the numbers | Health Sociology Review | 2020 | 49 |
41 | Becoming a wise old woman: resilience and wellness in later life | Health Sociology Review | 2003 | 48 |
42 | Explaining the growth of complementary and alternative medicine | Health Sociology Review | 2007 | 48 |
43 | Parental work schedules and adolescent depression | Health Sociology Review | 2009 | 46 |
44 | School-based cognitive-behavioural interventions: A systematic review of effects and inequalities | Health Sociology Review | 2009 | 46 |
45 | Being the butt of the joke: Homophobic humour, male identity, and its connection to emotional and physical violence for men | Health Sociology Review | 2010 | 45 |
46 | Informal caring networks for people at end of life: building social capital in Australian communities | Health Sociology Review | 2015 | 45 |
47 | Confining risk: Choice and responsibility in childbirth in a risk society | Health Sociology Review | 2006 | 44 |
48 | Components of perceived stigma and perceptions of well-being among university students with and without disability experience | Health Sociology Review | 2007 | 44 |
49 | Social determinants of child health and well-being | Health Sociology Review | 2009 | 44 |
50 | Lesbian mothers, gay sperm donors, and community: Ensuring the well-being of children and families | Health Sociology Review | 2008 | 42 |