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Using Photographs to Capture Women's Experiences of Chemotherapy: Reflecting on the Method
Hannah Frith
University of Brighton, Brighton, United Kingdom, H.L.Frith{at}brighton.ac.uk
Diana Harcourt
University of the West of England, Bristol, United Kingdom
This article examines the value of using the photo-elicitation method for generating health-related narratives. Drawing on research in which women kept a photographic record of their experiences of chemotherapy treatment for breast cancer, this research explored how this method (a) produced elaborate accounts of illness experiences through an exploration of the process of representing experiences and through an interrogation of the images themselves; (b) allowed an opportunity to capture experiences over time and a way of capturing the past, which can then be reexplored from the present; (c) enabled patients to retain control over their images of themselves and how they choose to represent their experiences; and (d) provided a window into the private, everyday experiences of patients away from a health care setting.
Key Words: photography chemotherapy breast cancer cancer psychosocial aspects interviews qualitative methods general
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Qualitative Health Research, Vol. 17, No. 10,
1340-1350 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1049732307308949

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