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Dr Mark Davis

Dr Mark Davis. 2 2 October 2014. Research programme. sexualities, health and digital media disclosure of diagnosis and other aspects of health and the body transformation of the sexual health clinic through diagnostic, treatment, information and digital media technologies

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Dr Mark Davis

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  1. Dr Mark Davis 22 October 2014

  2. Research programme • sexualities, health and digital media • disclosure of diagnosis and other aspects of health and the body • transformation of the sexual health clinic through diagnostic, treatment, information and digital media technologies • social, public policy and scientific aspects of pandemics, contagion and microbial life • narrative research approaches

  3. Sexualities and digital media • Collaborators from Glasgow Caledonian University • NHS funded research in Scotland • Quantitative and qualitative research with gay men on HIV prevention and digital media • Focus on hook-up apps • Paper: Location, safety and (non) strangers in gay men’s narratives on ‘hook-up’ apps

  4. Disclosure • Workshops in London and San Francisco • Book edited with Lenore Manderson • HIV; genetic diseases; mental illness; gender reassignment; sleep disorders; domestic violence • Davis, M. and Manderson, L. eds (2014) Disclosure in health and illness, London: Routledge, 201 pages. • Davis, M. and Flowers, P. (2014) 'HIV/STI prevention technologies and strategic (in)visibilities' in Davis, M. and Manderson, L. edsDisclosure in Health and Illness, Routledge, pages 72 - 88. • Editing special issue for Current Anthropology on ‘Life and death of the secret’

  5. Transformation of the clinic • Interviews with HIV and sexual health experts in Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne, Toronto, London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Stockholm • Focus on treatment as prevention; rapid testing; self-testing; PrEP; microbicides; self-triage; mobile phone clinics; pop-up testing • Editing special issue for Culture, Health & Sexuality on ‘Sex, Health and the Technological Imagination’ • Davis, M. (2014) After the clinic? Researching sexual health technology in context, Culture, Health & Sexuality,  DOI:10.1080/13691058.2014.928371.

  6. Pandemic influenza • ARC Discovery Project ($293K; 2011/13) • Interviews with scientists and policy makers in the UK and Australia (thematic analysis) • Interviews and focus groups with general public in Melbourne, Sydney and Glasgow (thematic analysis) • Focus on: prevention; immunity and embodiment; media and communications; diagnosis and symptoms; pregnant women; altruism and compliance with guidelines • http://artsonline.monash.edu.au/pandemicinfluenza/

  7. Contagion and pandemics • Davis, M., Flowers, P., Lohm, D., Waller, E and Stephenson, N. (2014) Immunity, biopolitics and pandemics: Public and individual responses to the threat to life, Body & Society. • Davis, M., Flowers, P., Lohm, D., Waller, E. and Stephenson, N. (2014) “We became sceptics”: fear and media hype in general public narrative on the advent of pandemic influenza, Sociological Inquiry. • Flowers, P., Davis, M., Lohm, D., Waller, E. and Stephenson, N. (published online 23 June 2014) Understanding pandemic influenza behaviour: an exploratory biopsychosocial study, Journal of Health Psychology. • Waller, E., Davis, M. and Stephenson, N (published online 16 June 2014) Australia’s pandemic influenza ‘Protect’ phase: Emerging out of the fog of pandemic, Critical Public Health, DOI:10.1080/09581596.2014.926310. • Lohm, D., Flowers, P. Stephenson, N., Waller, E. and Davis, M. (2014) Biography, pandemic time and risk: pregnant women reflecting on their experiences of the 2009 influenza pandemic, Health (London), 18(5): 493-508. • Stephenson, N., Davis, M., Flowers, P., Waller, E. and MacGregor, C. (2014) Mobilising "vulnerability" in the public health response to pandemic influenza, Social Science & Medicine, 102:10-7. • Davis, M., Flowers, P. and Stephenson, N. (2014) ‘We had to do what we thought was right at the time’: retrospective public health discourse on the 2009 H1N1 pandemic in the UK, Sociology of Health and Illness, 36 (3): 369-82. • Davis, M., Flowers, P. and Stephenson, N. (2014) ‘We had to do what we thought was right at the time’: retrospective public health discourse on the 2009 H1N1 pandemic in the UK, Sociology of Health and Illness, 36 (3): 369-82. • Davis, M, Stephenson, N. and Flowers, P. (2011) Compliant, complacent or panicked? Investigating the problematisation of the Australian general public in pandemic influenza control, Social Science & Medicine, 72(6): 912-918.

  8. Narrative • Member advisory board Centre for Narrative Research in the UK (http://artsonline.monash.edu.au/pandemicinfluenza/) • Squire, C., Davis, M., Esin, C., Andrews, M., Harrison, B., Hyden, L. and Hyden, M. (2014) What is narrative research? London: Bloomsbury Academic, 156 pages. • Davis, M. (2013) ‘Doing research ‘on and through’ new media narrative’ in M. Andrews, M. Tamboukou and Squire, C. (eds) Doing narrative research, Sage: London, pages 159-175. • Davis, M. (2011) ‘You have to come into the world’: transition, emotion and being in narratives of life with the internet, Somatechnics, 1(2): 253-271. • Book project: ‘Flu stories’

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