Thesis Overview:
The medical understanding of Intracranial Hypertension (IH) has been predominantly shaped by clinical perspectives, focusing on physiological mechanisms and medical treatments. While this biomedical knowledge is crucial, it represents only a partial understanding of the condition. With a significant lack of first-person perspectives included in the IH research, this research aims to broaden the existing narrative by exploring the lived experiences of people with IH, recognising their experiential knowledge as a legitimate source of expertise.
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Publications
Disability as Method: Researching Intracranial Hypertension through Crip-Chronic Time
Kelly Moes
The Researcher's Compass, [under review]
"Just Lose Weight": Weight-based Medical Bias in Intracranial Hypertension
Kelly Moes
The 11th Annual Weight Stigma Conference: From Weight Stigma to Size and Weight Inclusiveness and Liberation, , Frontiers in Psychiatry, vol. 17, 2026, p. 1785195
Kelly Moes
Timescapes of Health, Illness and Care, Dr. Katherine Kenny, Dr. Mia Harrison, Dr. Anthony K.J. Smith, Timescapes of Health, Illness and Care, chapter 11, Springer Nature, Singapore, 2025
"We all don't fit inside the same box": When Men Have a 'Women's Disease' [poster]
Kelly Moes
Gender Research Network Showcase, Curtin University, 2025
Kelly Moes
[Doctoral Thesis], Curtin University, 2025
Kelly Moes, Mike Kent
Including Disability, vol. 6, 2025
(Dis)locatedness: Reimagining digital chronic illness social connections as a Community of Practice
Kelly Moes
The Australian Sociology Association Conference, 2024 Nov
Kelly Moes
Leeds Disability Conference, Leeds, UK, 2024 Sep
Expressing the IH Lived Experience through Images
Kelly Moes
Borderline Bodies, Health and Medical Humanities Symposium, Australian National University, 2024 Jun