Margaret M. Quinlan

Margaret M. Quinlan

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

H-index: 20

North America-United States

About Margaret M. Quinlan

Margaret M. Quinlan, With an exceptional h-index of 20 and a recent h-index of 16 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of North Carolina at Charlotte, specializes in the field of health communication, gender, parenting, medical expertise, reproductive health.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

“Trust yourself and your body”: advice from fat individuals on how to navigate fat fertility, pregnancy, and birth

Bearing witness to joy and sorrow: Narrative medicine and reproductive endocrinologist and infertility (REI) providers’ journeys in infertility treatment

Expand and extend postpartum Medicaid to support maternal and child health

“She Didn’t Think Fat Women Deserved to Have Children”: Memorable Messages From Healthcare Providers in the Context of Fat Pregnancy

Trauma of the shared environment: a qualitative analysis of the experiences of survivors of college campus sexual assault

Expanding Our Understanding of Birth Doulas’ Emotional and Informational Support Role: A Qualitative Analysis of Interventions Delivered During COVID-19

“Always on parade”: Pregnancy experience of active-duty air force members.

Memorable messages about fat bodies before, during, and after pregnancy

Margaret M. Quinlan Information

University

Position

Associate Professor

Citations(all)

1687

Citations(since 2020)

994

Cited By

130433

hIndex(all)

20

hIndex(since 2020)

16

i10Index(all)

37

i10Index(since 2020)

26

Email

University Profile Page

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Margaret M. Quinlan Skills & Research Interests

health communication

gender

parenting

medical expertise

reproductive health

Top articles of Margaret M. Quinlan

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

“Trust yourself and your body”: advice from fat individuals on how to navigate fat fertility, pregnancy, and birth

Fat Studies

Erin D Basinger

Margaret M Quinlan

Audrey M Curry

2024/1/2

Bearing witness to joy and sorrow: Narrative medicine and reproductive endocrinologist and infertility (REI) providers’ journeys in infertility treatment

Health Communication

Margaret M Quinlan

Heather J Carmack

Emma Schambach

2024/3/20

Expand and extend postpartum Medicaid to support maternal and child health

Translational Behavioral Medicine

Jan T Mooney

Alicia A Dahl

Margaret M Quinlan

Jodie Lisenbee

Farida N Yada

...

2024/2/28

“She Didn’t Think Fat Women Deserved to Have Children”: Memorable Messages From Healthcare Providers in the Context of Fat Pregnancy

Women's Reproductive Health

Erin D Basinger

Margaret M Quinlan

2023/2/9

Trauma of the shared environment: a qualitative analysis of the experiences of survivors of college campus sexual assault

Violence against women

C Austin Coates Quezada

Laura Armstrong

Ryan Kilmer

Margaret Quinlan

Charlie Reeve

2023

Expanding Our Understanding of Birth Doulas’ Emotional and Informational Support Role: A Qualitative Analysis of Interventions Delivered During COVID-19

Women's Reproductive Health

Jodie Lisenbee

Jennifer B Webb

Virginia Gil-Rivas

Margaret M Quinlan

Alicia A Dahl

2023/12/20

“Always on parade”: Pregnancy experience of active-duty air force members.

American Journal of Orthopsychiatry

Magin A Day

Virginia Gil-Rivas

Margaret M Quinlan

2023

Memorable messages about fat bodies before, during, and after pregnancy

Health Communication

Erin D Basinger

Margaret M Quinlan

Margaret Rawlings

2023/11/10

A review of miscarriage and healthcare communication in the United States

Kandice R Lacci-Reilly

Larissa R Brunner Huber

Margaret M Quinlan

Charles B Hutchison

Lorenzo N Hopper

2023/8/11

Magnitude 5.1: A Collaborative Anti-Anti-Narrative of Chaos and Cortisol during the Pandemic

Journal of Autoethnography

Christine S Davis

Margaret M Quinlan

Jonathan L Crane

2023/4/1

IVF so white, so medical: Digital normativity and algorithm bias in infertility on Instagram

Human-Machine Communication

Caitlyn M Jarvis

Margaret M Quinlan

2022/8/1

Birth doula care in California during COVID-19: The impacts of social distancing on a high-touch helping profession

Qualitative Health Research

Jodie Lisenbee

Virginia Gil-Rivas

Jennifer B Webb

Alicia A Dahl

Margaret M Quinlan

2022/8

Universal design for measurement: centering the experiences of individuals with disabilities within health measurement research

Evaluation & the Health Professions

Erin Vinoski Thomas

Jan Warren-Findlow

Charlie L Reeve

Jennifer B Webb

Sarah B Laditka

...

2021/9

# Motherhoodishard: Narrating our research and mothering in the postpartum stage through texting and social media

Health Communication

Margaret M Quinlan

Bethany Johnson

2020/5/11

Storytelling and progressive action: A model of engaged scholarship

The Handbook of Applied Communication Research

Lynn M Harter

Stephanie M Pangborn

Margaret M Quinlan

Taylor Walker

Courtney Hook

2020/4/17

“Sticky baby dust” and emoji: Social support on Instagram during In Vitro Fertilization.

Rhetoric of Health and Medicine

N. Johnson

B.

Quinlan

M. M.

& Pope

2020

See List of Professors in Margaret M. Quinlan University(University of North Carolina at Charlotte)