2020
DOI: 10.14423/smj.0000000000001170
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Gynecological Care and Contraception Considerations in Women with Cerebral Palsy

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Cited by 2 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Although women with CP face similar barriers to other disabled women in relation to women-centred screening programmes, they are also likely to experience barriers caused by HCPs' lack of understanding of the effects of CP in adulthood and how these interconnect with the female life cycle (Table 4). For example the invasive nature of cervical examinations may trigger spasms or additional pain for women with CP (Fasen et al, 2020), or the involuntary movements associated with some types of CP could cause the breast to be overshadowed by the head and shoulder thus preventing the clear visualization of breast tissue (Poulos et al, 2006). Spasticity is disagreeable, complex and little understood (Bhimani, McAlpine, and Henly, 2012), but listening to women's own words about it can be helpful.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although women with CP face similar barriers to other disabled women in relation to women-centred screening programmes, they are also likely to experience barriers caused by HCPs' lack of understanding of the effects of CP in adulthood and how these interconnect with the female life cycle (Table 4). For example the invasive nature of cervical examinations may trigger spasms or additional pain for women with CP (Fasen et al, 2020), or the involuntary movements associated with some types of CP could cause the breast to be overshadowed by the head and shoulder thus preventing the clear visualization of breast tissue (Poulos et al, 2006). Spasticity is disagreeable, complex and little understood (Bhimani, McAlpine, and Henly, 2012), but listening to women's own words about it can be helpful.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We sought diversity in social class, age and classification of CP. Central motor dysfunctions may be spastic, dyskinetic, mixed, ataxic and hypotonic (Fasen et al, 2020) with regional distribution of affected functions such as haemiplegia, diplegia and quadriplegia (Scope, 2018) (see Table 1). Digital strategies facilitated consent among women with CP, their participation in research interviews, and communication with the research team, without necessarily relying on others for physical or communication support.…”
Section: Participants Sampling and Recruitmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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