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Sarah Grogan

Researcher at Manchester Metropolitan University

Publications -  147
Citations -  6191

Sarah Grogan is an academic researcher from Manchester Metropolitan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Thematic analysis & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 142 publications receiving 5585 citations. Previous affiliations of Sarah Grogan include Cancer Council Victoria & Cardiff University.

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Experiences of anabolic steroid use: in-depth interviews with men and women body builders.

TL;DR: It is concluded that intervention programmes need the support of the body building community in order to be effective and Steroid Use vs Abuse; Side-effects; Trusted Information Sources; and Social Pressure emerged.
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‘Oh, I’m just, you know, a little bit weak because I’m going to the doctor's’: Young men's talk of self-referral to primary healthcare services

TL;DR: Young men visit their general practitioner (GP) less frequently than young women and tend to utilise primary healthcare services reluctantly, and to explore the ways they used their talk to make sense of those visits in terms of multiple masculinities and gendered behaviours, Foucauldian discourse analysis and discursive psychology are used.
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Evaluating the Perceived Stress Scale among UK university students: implications for stress measurement and management

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the factor structure, composite reliability, convergent validity, and gender invariance of the perceived stress scale (PSS) among 524 UK university students.
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Preventing Disability through Exercise: Investigating Older Adults’ Influences and Motivations to Engage in Physical Activity

TL;DR: In this article, focus groups were used to gain an in-depth understanding of personal and social influences on physical activity in 48 52-87-year-old participants and a model produced using a Grounded Theory analysis showed that preventing health decline was particularly important in determining physical activity participation, other influences included enjoyment of exercise, others as motivators to exercise and perceived limited appreciation for older people's needs.
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The individual health burden of acne Appearance-related distress in male and female adolescents and adults with back, chest and facial acne

TL;DR: Patients 20 years and above were significantly more likely to suffer appearance-related distress than 16—19-year-olds and ethnicity was also implicated in appearance concern arising from acne.