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Sarah Earle

Researcher at Open University

Publications -  119
Citations -  1837

Sarah Earle is an academic researcher from Open University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Human sexuality & Health promotion. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 114 publications receiving 1664 citations. Previous affiliations of Sarah Earle include Bath Spa University & Northampton Community College.

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Factors affecting the initiation of breastfeeding: implications for breastfeeding promotion

TL;DR: The data suggest that health promotion campaigns in the UK have been influential in their ability to educate women about the benefits of breastfeeding and some of the formula feeding women expressed a strong desire to re-establish their identities as separate individuals and as 'non-mothers.
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Why some women do not breast feed: bottle feeding and fathers' role.

Sarah Earle
- 01 Dec 2000 - 
TL;DR: To increase the incidence of breast feeding, health-care professionals should consider the need for preconceptual health promotion and the role of paternal involvement in baby-feeding decisions needs to be acknowledged and men need to be included in breast-feeding promotion campaigns.
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‘The silence is roaring’: sterilization, reproductive rights and women with intellectual disabilities

TL;DR: More empirical studies are needed to recover the experiences of women who have been sterilized and to explore how decisions about reproductive choice and capacity were made in the past and continue to be made today.
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“bumps and boobs”: fatness and women's experiences of pregnancy

TL;DR: It is argued that pregnant women adopt a pragmatic approach of both selective resistance to asexualisation and selective compliance with the pressure to be slim during pregnancy.
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Disability, facilitated sex and the role of the nurse

TL;DR: It is argued that an holistic approach to nursing care should include an appreciation of patient sexuality, and suggests that nurses can play an important role along the continuum of facilitated sex.