Screened Out: Women with Disabilities and Preventive Health

This paper explores the lived experience of women with disabilities in relation to preventative health. It is based on qualitative research in Australia involving 25 individual interviews and 4 focus groups with women with disabilities about their experience of cervical screening (Pap tests), 16 int...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kelley Johnson, Ria Strong, Lynne Hillier, Marian Pitts
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Stockholm University Press 2007-02-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research
Online Access:https://www.sjdr.se/articles/232
Description
Summary:This paper explores the lived experience of women with disabilities in relation to preventative health. It is based on qualitative research in Australia involving 25 individual interviews and 4 focus groups with women with disabilities about their experience of cervical screening (Pap tests), 16 interviews and 2 focus groups with service providers and advocacy organizations and an audit of 4 Pap Test Services by a researcher with a disability. The research identified three kinds of barrier that prevented some women from accessing cervical screening: societal barriers, individual living circumstances, and the way the women and those around them constituted their subjectivity. This paper outlines briefly the key findings from the study, focussing particularly on barriers relating to subjectivity.
ISSN:1501-7419
1745-3011