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Nikki Kiyimba
Nikki Kiyimba
Mātai Rongo
Verified email at maatairongo.com - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
‘Unsatisfactory Saturation’: a critical exploration of the notion of saturated sample sizes in qualitative research
M O’reilly, N Parker
Qualitative research 13 (2), 190-197, 2013
37772013
Advanced qualitative research: A guide to using theory
M Oâ ²Reilly, N Kiyimba
SAGE Publications Ltd, 2015
4082015
The risk of secondary traumatic stress in the qualitative transcription process: A research note
N Kiyimba, M O’Reilly
Qualitative Research 16 (4), 468-476, 2016
1282016
Doing mental health research with children and adolescents: A guide to qualitative methods
O Michelle, N Parker
Sage, 2014
942014
You can take a horse to water but you can’t make it drink’: Exploring children’s engagement and resistance in family therapy
M O’Reilly, N Parker
Contemporary Family Therapy 35, 491-507, 2013
852013
Using naturally occurring data in qualitative health research: A practical guide
N Kiyimba, JN Lester, M O'Reilly
Springer International Publishing, 2019
712019
‘Gossiping’as a social action in family therapy: The pseudo-absence and pseudo-presence of children
N Parker, M O’Reilly
Discourse Studies 14 (4), 457-475, 2012
682012
“This is a question we have to ask everyone”: asking young people about self‐harm and suicide
M O'Reilly, N Kiyimba, K Karim
Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing 23 (8), 479-488, 2016
662016
“We are alone in the house”: A case study addressing researcher safety and risk
N Parker, M O'Reilly
Qualitative Research in Psychology 10 (4), 341-354, 2013
512013
Ongoing processes of managing consent: The empirical ethics of using video-recording in clinical practice and research
M O'Reilly, N Parker, I Hutchby
Clinical Ethics 6 (4), 179-185, 2011
472011
The clinical use of Subjective Units of Distress scales (SUDs) in child mental health assessments: a thematic evaluation
N Kiyimba, M O’Reilly
Journal of Mental Health 29 (4), 418-423, 2020
402020
Reflective interventionist conversation analysis
M O’Reilly, N Kiyimba, J Nina Lester, T Muskett
Discourse & Communication 14 (6), 619-634, 2020
352020
Discursive psychology: Implications for counseling psychology
JN Lester, YJ Wong, M O’Reilly, N Kiyimba
The Counseling Psychologist 46 (5), 576-607, 2018
312018
An exploration of the possibility for secondary traumatic stress among transcriptionists: A grounded theory approach
N Kiyimba, M O’Reilly
Qualitative Research in Psychology 13 (1), 92-108, 2016
312016
‘She needs a smack in the gob’: negotiating what is appropriate talk in front of children in family therapy
M O'Reilly, N Parker
Journal of Family Therapy 36 (3), 287-307, 2014
292014
Establishing quality in discursive psychology: Three domains to consider
M O’Reilly, N Kiyimba, JN Lester, D Edwards
Qualitative Research in Psychology 18 (3), 406-425, 2021
282021
Autism in the twentieth century: An evolution of a controversial condition
M O’Reilly, JN Lester, N Kiyimba
Healthy Minds in the Twentieth Century: In and Beyond the Asylum, 137-165, 2020
282020
Reflecting on what ‘you said’as a way of reintroducing difficult topics in child mental health assessments
N Kiyimba, M O'Reilly
Child and Adolescent Mental Health 23 (3), 148-154, 2018
282018
Ethics in praxis: Negotiating the presence and functions of a video camera in family therapy
I Hutchby, M O’Reilly, N Parker
Discourse Studies 14 (6), 675-690, 2012
282012
Reflections from behind the screen: avoiding therapeutic rupture when utilizing reflecting teams
N Parker, M O’Reilly
The Family Journal 21 (2), 170-179, 2013
262013
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