References
- Alaszewski, A., Alaszewski, H., & Potter, J. (2004). The bereavement model, stroke and rehabilitation: a critical analysis of the use of a psychological model in professional practice. Disability and Rehabilitation, 26(18), 1067-1078.
- Bauby, J.-D. (1997). The diving bell and the butterfly. Great Britain: Fourth Estate Limited.
- Bennett, B. (2007). Gaining understanding from patients’ stories to inform neuroscience nursing practice. British Journal of Neuroscience Nursing, 3(7), 308-312.
- Casanova, E., Lazzari, R. E., Lotta, S., & Mazzucchi, A. (2003). Locked-in syndrome: improvement in the prognosis after an early intensive multidisciplinary rehabilitation. Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation, 84(6), 862-867.
- Caston, S. (2015). The Diving Bell and the Butterfly-From the Eye of the Unseen. Journal of Humanities in Rehabilitation
- Chin, A. E., Hedberg, K., Higginson, G. K., & Fleming, D. W. (1999). Legalized physician-assisted suicide in Oregon— the first year’s experience. New England Journal of Medicine, 340(7), 577-583.
- Church, D. (2008). Review of The Diving Bell and the Butterfly. Disability Studies Quarterly, 28(2).
- de Mendivil, A. O., Alcalá-Galiano, A., Ochoa, M., Salvador, E., & Millán, J. M. (2013). Brainstem Stroke: Anatomy, Clinical and Radiological Findings. Seminars in Ultrasound, CT and MRI, 34 (2), 131-141. doi:https://doi.org/10.1053/j.sult.2013.01.004
- Glenn, L. M. (2009). The diving bell and the butterfly. The American Journal of Bioethics, 9(3), 50-51.
- Guzek, Z., & Kowalska, J. (2020). Analysis of the degree of acceptance of illness among patients after a stroke: An observational study. Clinical Interventions in Aging, 2063-2072.
- Halan, T., Ortiz, J. F., Reddy, D., Altamimi, A., Ajibowo, A. O., & Fabara, S. P. (2021). Locked-In syndrome: a systematic review of long-term management and prognosis. Cureus, 13(7).
- Hughes, A. K., & Cummings, C. E. (2020). Grief and loss associated with stroke recovery: a qualitative study of stroke survivors and their spousal caregivers. Journal of Patient Experience, 7 (6), 1219-1226.
- Ingram, G. (2015). The Diving-Bell and the Butterfly: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
- Kearney, P. (2006). Autopathography and humane medicine: The diving bell and the butterfly—an interpretation. Medical humanities, 32(2), 111-113.
- Kellett, B. (2000). Rethinking locked-in syndrome: ever wonder whether unresponsive patients can hear you? Perhaps its time we thought about the very real possibility that those who are deemed to be in a locked-in state could be anything but! The Canadian Nurse, 96(8), 10.
- Laine, T. (2010). The Diving Bell and the Butterfly as an emotional event. Midwest Studies in Philosophy, 34(1), 295-305.
- Laureys, S., Pellas, F., Van Eeckhout, P., Ghorbel, S., Schnakers, C., Perrin, F., Damas, F. (2005). The locked-in syndrome: what is it like to be conscious but paralyzed and voiceless? Progress in brain research, 150, 495-611.
- Mathiasen, H. (2008). Mind over body: The diving bell and the butterfly. The American journal of medicine, 121(9), 829.
- Newham, R., Curzio, J., Carr, G., & Terry, L. (2014). Contemporary nursing wisdom in the UK and ethical knowing: difficulties in conceptualising the ethics of nursing. Nurs Philos, 15(1), 50-56. doi:10.1111/nup.12028
- Raoul, V., Canam, C., Onyeoziri, G. N., Overboe, J., & Paterson, C. (2001). Narrating the Unspeakable: Interdisciplinary Readings of Jean-Dominuque Bauby’s The Diving-Bell and the Butterfly. Literature and Medicine, 20(2), 183-208.
- Schjolberg, A., & Sunnerhagen, K. (2012). Unlocking the locked in; a need for team approach in rehabilitation of survivors with locked-in syndrome. Acta Neurologica Scandinavica, 125(3), 192-198.
- Sorenson, C., Bounds, D., Huffine, J., & Moss, A. (2013). Protecting the autonomy of patients with locked-in syndrome through conserving dignity. British Journal of Neuroscience Nursing, 9(2), 83-88.
- Warriner, D. (2007). The Diving-Bell and the Butterfly. BMJ, 334. doi:10.1136/bmj.39239.635463.4E
- Wiltshire, K.-L. (1999). The Diving-Bell & The Butterfly: Taylor & Francis.
- Woodward, S. (2008). What do unconscious patients understand? (Vol. 4, pp. 205-205): MA Healthcare London.