On the politics of ignorance in nursing and health care: knowing ignorance
In: Routledge key themes in health and society
6 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Routledge key themes in health and society
In: Witness: the Canadian journal of critical nursing discourse, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 1-2
ISSN: 2291-5796
In: Witness: the Canadian journal of critical nursing discourse, Band 3, Heft 1, S. 73-84
ISSN: 2291-5796
Minority nurses are underrepresented in leadership roles in the Canadian healthcare system. The purpose of this study was to explore MNs' perceptions and experiences with regards to career development and MNs in leadership positions. Twelve nurses, four Caucasian and eight from the Caribbean and Africa in a tertiary care setting were recruited through purposive sampling. Face-to-face semi-structured interviews were conducted, transcribed, coded, and analyzed using critical ethnography. Findings revealed lack of social support, of equal opportunities, of recognition and of trust. Despite negative experiences, minority nurses recognized the value of their work experience at the hospital where they were employed. Committing to a diverse workforce in leadership roles can ultimately have an effect on patient care. Minority nurses' leadership is needed to provide role models and to ensure the delivery of competent care to diverse populations.
In: Witness: the Canadian journal of critical nursing discourse, Band 1, Heft 2, S. 4-16
ISSN: 2291-5796
Due to the criminalization of marginalized people, many markers of social disadvantage are overrepresented among prisoners. With an aging population, end of life in prison thus becomes a social justice issue that nurses must contend with, engaging with the dual suffering of dying and of incarceration. However, prison palliative care is constrained by the punitive mandate of the institution and has been critiqued for normalizing death behind bars and appealing to discourses of individual redemption. This paper argues that prison palliative has much to learn from harm reduction. Critical reflections from harm reduction scholars and practitioners hold important insights for prison palliative care: decoupled from its historical efforts to reshape the social terrain inhabited by people who use drugs, harm reduction can become institutionalized and depoliticized. Efforts to address the harms of substandard palliative care must therefore be interwoven with the necessarily political work of addressing the injustice of incarceration.
Due to the criminalization of marginalized people, many markers of social disadvantage are overrepresented among prisoners. With an aging population, end of life in prison thus becomes a social justice issue that nurses must contend with, engaging with the dual suffering of dying and of incarceration. However, prison palliative care is constrained by the punitive mandate of the institution and has been critiqued for normalizing death behind bars and appealing to discourses of individual redemption. This paper argues that prison palliative has much to learn from harm reduction. Critical reflections from harm reduction scholars and practitioners hold important insights for prison palliative care: decoupled from its historical efforts to reshape the social terrain inhabited by people who use drugs, harm reduction can become institutionalized and depoliticized. Efforts to address the harms of substandard palliative care must therefore be interwoven with the necessarily political work of addressing the injustice of incarceration.
BASE
In: Minorités linguistiques et société, Heft 19, S. 62
ISSN: 1927-8632