Search Results - Frances Griffiths
Cottingley Fairies

Interest in the Cottingley Fairies gradually declined after 1921. Both girls married and lived abroad for a time after they grew up, and yet the photographs continued to hold the public imagination. In 1966 a reporter from the ''Daily Express'' newspaper traced Elsie, who had by then returned to the United Kingdom. Elsie left open the possibility that she believed she had photographed her thoughts, and the media once again became interested in the story.
In the early 1980s Elsie and Frances admitted that the photographs were faked, using cardboard cutouts of fairies copied from a popular children's book of the time, but Frances maintained that the fifth and final photograph was genuine. As of 2019 the photographs and the cameras used are in the collections of the National Science and Media Museum in Bradford, England. Provided by Wikipedia
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Spontaneously Generated Online Patient Experience of Modafinil: A Qualitative and NLP Analysis by Julia Walsh, Jonathan Cave, Frances Griffiths
Published 2021-02-01
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The effect of a roving nurse mentor on household coverage and quality of care provided by community health worker teams in South Africa: a longitudinal study with a before, after a... by Jane Goudge, Olukemi Babalola, Hlologelo Malatji, Jonathan Levin, Margaret Thorogood, Frances Griffiths
Published 2023-02-01
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Caring in the silences: why physicians and surgeons do not discuss emergency care and treatment planning with their patients — an analysis of hospital-based ethnographic case studi... by Frances Griffiths, Gavin D Perkins, Anne-Marie Slowther, Karin Eli, Claire Hawkes
Published 2022-03-01
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