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2.
J Christ Nurs ; 41(2): 76-77, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38436334
3.
Int J Equity Health ; 23(1): 1, 2024 Jan 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38167082

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Persons with albinism face challenges to their wellbeing, safety, and security, ranging from vision impairment and skin cancer to stigma and discrimination. In some regions, they also face human rights atrocities including mutilation and murder. Research on human rights and albinism is a relatively new field that has gained momentum since the United Nations appointment of an Independent Expert on the enjoyment of human rights by persons with albinism. In this paper, we present the results of a mixed methods study undertaken to identify priorities for research, advocacy, and policy on albinism and human rights. METHODS: The first component was a synthesis of peer-reviewed and grey literatures at the nexus of albinism, spiritual/cultural beliefs and practices, and human rights. We then conducted a priority-setting survey, informed by Delphi methods, on extant knowledge-practice gaps and research, advocacy, and policy priorities. Inclusion criteria included demonstrated expertise in the field (e.g., peer-reviewed publications, funded research), membership on national or international associations, or advocacy (civil society organizations) of more than 2 years in albinism and human rights. Thereafter, we gathered leading researchers, policy-makers, and civil society stakeholders for a Roundtable to gain consensus on these priorities. RESULTS: Access to skin and vision care, and education were not deemed high priority for research, likely because the evidence supporting the need for these is well established. However, they were priorities for advocacy and policy: what is needed is mobilization of this evidence through advocacy and implementation of such services (policy). Other social determinants of health (rurality, poverty, and gender equality) are present as subtext in the findings, more so than priorities for research, advocacy, or policy, despite their preponderance in the lives of persons with albinism. Research was prioritized on stigma and discrimination; advocacy; and witchcraft, but with some differentiation between Global North and Global South priorities. Priorities for research, advocacy, and policy vary in keeping with the explanatory frameworks at play, including how harmful practices and witchcraft are viewed. CONCLUSIONS: The lived experience of albinism is profoundly shaped by the social determinants of health (SDOH). Threats to the security and well-being of persons with albinism should be viewed through a human rights lens that encompasses the explanatory frameworks at play.


Subject(s)
Albinism , Health Policy , Humans , Human Rights , Organizations , Social Determinants of Health
4.
Nurs Inq ; 31(2): e12608, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37869907

ABSTRACT

Although spiritual practices such as prayer are engaged by many to support well-being and coping, little research has addressed nurses and prayer, whether for themselves or facilitating patients' use of prayer. We conducted a qualitative study to explore how prayer (as a proxy for spirituality and religion) is manifest-whether embraced, tolerated, or resisted-in healthcare, and how institutional and social contexts shape how prayer is understood and enacted. This paper analyzes interviews with 21 nurses in Vancouver and London as a subset of the larger study. Findings show that nurses' kindness can buffer the loneliness and exclusion of ill health and in this way support the "spirit" of those in their care. Spiritual support for patients rarely incorporated prayer, in part because of ambiguities about permission and professional boundaries. Nurses' engagement with prayer and spiritual support could become a politicized site of religious accommodation, where imposition, religious illiteracy, and racism could derail person-centered care and consequently enact social exclusion. Spiritual support (including prayer) sustained nurses themselves. We propose that nursing's equity-oriented knowledge encompass spirituality and religion as sites of exclusion and inclusion. Nurses must be supported to move past religious illiteracy to provide culturally and spiritually sensitive care with clarity about professional boundaries and collaborative models of spiritual care.

5.
J Christ Nurs ; 40(4): 216-217, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37653649
6.
Nurs Inq ; 30(4): e12590, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37641504

ABSTRACT

Our intention is to contribute to the development of Canadian Nursing and Medical Education (NursMed) and efforts to redress deepening, intersecting health and social inequities. This paper addresses the following two research questions: (1) What are the ways in which Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies can inform Canadian NursMed Education with a focus on critically examining settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice? (2) What are the potential struggles and adaptations required to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies within Canadian NursMed Education in service of redressing intersecting health and social inequities? Briefly, Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies are philosophies of learning that encourage teachers and students to reflect on health through the lenses of settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice. Drawing on critical ethnographic research methods, we conducted in-depth interviews with 25 faculty members and engaged in participant observation of classrooms in university-based Canadian NursMed Education. The research findings are organized into three major themes, beginning with common institutional features influencing pedagogical approaches. The next set of findings addresses the complex strategies participants apply to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Lastly, the findings illustrate the emotional and spiritual toll some faculty members face when attempting to deliver Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. We conclude that through the application of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies teachers and students can support movements towards health equity, social justice, and unlearning/undoing settler-colonialism. This study contributes new knowledge to stimulate dialog and action regarding the role of health professions education, specifically Nursing and Medicine as an upstream determinant of health in settler-colonial nations such as Canada, United States, Australia, and New Zealand.

7.
Dimens Crit Care Nurs ; 42(4): 223-233, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37219476

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Few studies in academic literature involve the application of a spiritual health intervention for the purpose of mitigating compassion fatigue in nurses. OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this qualitative study was to explore the perspectives of Canadian spiritual health practitioners (SHPs) in their support for nurses to prevent compassion fatigue. METHOD: Interpretive description was utilized for this research study. Sixty-minute interviews with 7 individual SHPs were conducted. Data were analyzed with NVivo 12 software (QSR International, Burlington, Massachusetts). Thematic analysis identified common themes that allowed data from interviews, a pilot project on psychological debriefing, and a literature search to be compared, contrasted, and compiled. RESULTS: The 3 main themes were found. The first theme highlighted the underlying issue of how spirituality is ranked or viewed within health care and the impact of leadership integrating spirituality in their practice. The second theme related to SHPs' perception of nurses' compassion fatigue and lack of connection to spirituality. The final theme explored the nature of SHP support to mitigate compassion fatigue before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. DISCUSSION: Spiritual health practitioners are positioned in a unique role to be facilitators of connectedness. They are professionally trained to provide a type of in situ nurturing for patients and health care staff through spiritual assessments, pastoral counseling, and psychotherapy. The COVID-19 pandemic has revealed an underlying desire for in situ nurturing and connectedness in nurses due to an increase in existential questioning, unusual patient circumstances, and social isolation leading to disconnectedness. Organizational spiritual values are recommended to be exemplified by those in leadership to create holistic, sustainable work environments.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Compassion Fatigue , Nurses , Humans , Canada , Pandemics , Pilot Projects
8.
J Health Care Chaplain ; 29(3): 307-319, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37184130

ABSTRACT

The global COVID-19 pandemic has revealed healthcare settings as sites of much-needed scrutiny as to the workings of racism and racialization in shaping healthcare encounters, health outcomes, and workplace conditions. Little research has focused on how healthcare chaplains experience and respond to social processes of racism and racialization. We apply a critical race lens to understand racism and racialization in healthcare chaplaincy, and inspired by Patricia Hill Collins, propose a "critical multifaith approach." Drawing on research in healthcare in Canada and England, we generated four composite narratives to analyze racialization's variability and resistances employed by Indigenous, Arab, Black, and White chaplains. The composites disclose complex intersecting histories of colonialism, religion, race, and gender. Developing a critical multifaith perspective on healthcare delivery is an essential competency for chaplains wanting to impact the systems in which they serve in the direction of more equitable human flourishing.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Racism , Humans , Clergy , Pandemics , Delivery of Health Care
11.
Intensive Crit Care Nurs ; 71: 103249, 2022 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35466025

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Critical care physicians and nurses have significant roles in the complex process of end-of-life decision making. OBJECTIVE: To understand how nurses' and physicians' emotions, psychosocial factors and professional roles influence end-of-life decision making in critical care. RESEARCH DESIGN/METHODOLOGY: An interpretive descriptive qualitative approach was applied to collect and analyse data from semi-structured interviews with five critical care nurses and four critical care physicians from April to June 2018. SETTING: Four Canadian critical care units; three tertiary and one rural setting. FINDINGS: Three major themes arose: (1) the goal of avoiding futility as a shared mission, (2) ambiguity of the decision making process; and (3) influencing factors of subjective variability. The significant influencers shaping the dynamic and value-laden process were individual philosophy, moral weightiness, and family receptiveness. CONCLUSION: There is a need for a shared understanding of professional roles and clear communication of shared mission within health professional teams. Improved understanding of the end-of-life decision making process in critical care is essential to support nurses and physicians.


Subject(s)
Nurses , Physicians , Terminal Care , Canada , Death , Decision Making , Emotions , Humans , Professional Role , Qualitative Research , Terminal Care/psychology
12.
Soc Compass ; 69(4): 631-647, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36741301

ABSTRACT

In sociological studies of religion and chaplaincy, there is little research on how gender plays a role in structural inequalities and experiences of women chaplains. Through research on the work of women chaplains in public healthcare in Vancouver (Canada) and London (England) this qualitative study revealed that while they have opportunities for leadership and ministry in chaplaincy, they are often on the margins of the religious institutions they are affiliated with and the secular medical organisations that employ them. Simultaneously, they confront the social structuring of gender and race that can affect them being overlooked. By applying a lived religion and feminist intersectional analysis, this research focuses on an area of study that has received scant attention.


Dans les études sociologiques de la religion et de l'aumônerie, il y a peu de recherches sur la façon dont le genre joue un rôle dans les inégalités structurelles et les expériences des femmes aumônières. Grâce à une recherche sur le travail des femmes aumônières dans les services de santé publique à Vancouver (Canada) et à Londres (Angleterre), cette étude qualitative a révélé que si elles ont des possibilités de leadership et de ministère dans l'aumônerie, les femmes aumônières sont souvent en marge des institutions religieuses auxquelles elles sont affiliées et des organisations médicales laïques qui les emploient. Simultanément, elles se confrontent à la structuration sociale du genre et de la race qui peut les affecter en les laissant de côté. Grâce à une analyse de la religion vécue et à une analyse intersectionnelle féministe, cette recherche se concentre sur un domaine d'étude qui a reçu peu d'attention jusqu'ici.

13.
Syst Rev ; 10(1): 169, 2021 06 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34108024

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Substantial literature has highlighted the importance of patient-reported outcome and experience measures (PROMs and PREMs, respectively) to collect clinically relevant information to better understand and address what matters to patients. The purpose of this systematic review is to synthesize the evidence about how healthcare providers implement individual-level PROMs and PREMs data into daily practice. METHODS: This mixed methods systematic review protocol describes the design of our synthesis of the peer-reviewed research evidence (i.e., qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods), systematic reviews, organizational implementation projects, expert opinion, and grey literature. Keyword synonyms for "PROMs," PREMs," and "implementation" will be used to search eight databases (i.e., MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Web of Science, Embase, SPORTDiscus, Evidence-based Medicine Reviews, and ProQuest (Dissertation and Theses)) with limiters of English from 2009 onwards. Study selection criteria include implementation at the point-of-care by healthcare providers in any practice setting. Eligible studies will be critically appraised using validated tools (e.g., Joanna Briggs Institute). Guided by the review questions, data extraction and synthesis will occur simultaneously to identify biographical information and methodological characteristics as well as classify study findings related to implementation processes and strategies. As part of the narrative synthesis approach, two frameworks will be utilized: (a) Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) to identify influential factors of PROMs and PREMs implementation and (b) Expert Recommendations for Implementing Change (ERIC) to illicit strategies. Data management will be undertaken using NVivo 12TM. DISCUSSION: Data from PROMs and PREMs are critical to adopt a person-centered approach to healthcare. Findings from this review will guide subsequent phases of a larger project that includes interviews and a consensus-building forum with end users to create guidelines for implementing PROMs and PREMs at the point of care. SYSTEMATIC REVIEW REGISTRATION: PROSPERO CRD42020182904 .


Subject(s)
Health Personnel , Patient Reported Outcome Measures , Data Collection , Delivery of Health Care , Humans , Patient-Centered Care , Systematic Reviews as Topic
14.
Worldviews Evid Based Nurs ; 17(3): 229-238, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32476257

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: There is increased acknowledgment of the importance of knowledge translation (KT) in the role of graduate-prepared healthcare practitioners, such as nurses, as change agents in the mobilization of evidence-based knowledge. The offering of flexible educational programming online and hybrid course delivery in higher education is a response to insufficient didactic methods for providing graduate students with the competencies to facilitate KT. AIMS: To describe the development, implementation, and evaluation of a cohort-based, online, innovative KT curriculum using a theoretical approach to KT called the Knowledge-As-Action Framework, which focuses on the knower, knowledge, and context as being inseparable. This process strategically engages with stakeholders to link practice concerns with existing realities, thus providing the best available knowledge to inform KT action in complex healthcare contexts. METHODS: The Model of Evidence-Informed, Context-Relevant, Unified Curriculum Development in Nursing Education guided the cohort-based online KT course process. The development, implementation, and evaluation involved (a) an environmental scan, (b) a literature review, (c) faculty development, (d) curriculum design of two 10-week courses, and (e) a summation of the concurrent participatory evaluation of the two courses, including faculty and student responses. The Knowledge-As-Action Framework is comprised of six interrelated dimensions as part of a "kite" metaphor, with the underlying premise that if any one of the dimensions results in an imbalance, the KT process may be grounded. RESULTS: Evaluation revealed (a) intentionality of the core processes of curriculum work; (b) effectiveness of indicators for evaluating the KT courses; (c) leadership should be added as a learning domain for KT; (d) the Knowledge-As-Action Framework provided an integrated, philosophical, and evidence-based approach to KT; (e) cohort model facilitated a community of inquiry; and (f) the formalized structured approach of the courses with ongoing supervision and mentoring allowed for timely completion. LINKING EVIDENCE TO ACTION: Teaching and learning in an online cohort model created a community of inquiry and facilitated experiential learning. The active engagement of students with their practice-based stakeholders promoted change in clinical settings and enhanced students' professional development to lead change.


Subject(s)
Curriculum/trends , Education, Distance/methods , Education, Nursing, Graduate/methods , Translational Research, Biomedical/instrumentation , Translational Research, Biomedical/methods , Humans
15.
Nurs Leadersh (Tor Ont) ; 33(1): 35-51, 2020 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32437320

ABSTRACT

Clinical placements in correctional settings offer nursing students unique opportunities for learning mental health and community health concepts, including social justice, restorative justice and the impact of poverty and marginalization on health and life choices. Although there is some evidence to suggest that a small number of nursing programs use clinical placements in correctional settings, relatively little scholarly literature addresses nursing education in such settings, or the implications for nursing leadership when students do have an opportunity to learn in correctional settings. In this paper, we examine the literature that is available on this topic and present the findings of a secondary analysis of interviews with undergraduate nursing students at our nursing program in relation to their clinical placements in correctional settings. Drawing on the students' perspectives, we have found that these placements, in particular, have fostered learning about caring for marginalized populations; themes of hope and restorative justice featured prominently in their descriptions of their learning. Students also emphasized that they learned a great deal about the expanded role of nurses and about caring for marginalized populations. With strong administrative and faculty support, these settings offer students exposure to expert registered nurse mentors who work with clients in an expanded role to facilitate their achievement and stabilization of a broad range of health challenges. They are also role models for students, by showing students that nurses can be agents of hope when working with a diverse client population and their families. We offer recommendations on how to maximize student learning in correctional settings, including a reflection on how to support students' integration of their learning experiences in their nursing practice, with the long-term view that these transformative student experiences have the potential to shape our future nurse leaders.


Subject(s)
Leadership , Preceptorship/methods , Prisons/standards , Students, Nursing/psychology , Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate/methods , Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate/standards , HIV Infections/nursing , HIV Infections/psychology , Hepatitis C/nursing , Hepatitis C/psychology , Humans , Preceptorship/trends , Prisons/trends , Psychiatric Nursing/education , Psychiatric Nursing/methods , Qualitative Research , Social Determinants of Health
16.
Home Healthc Now ; 38(3): 154-162, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32358443

ABSTRACT

Social inclusion and social determinants of health (SDH) are key to healthy aging, and a failure to adequately address these influences can lead to negative health consequences such as the development and worsening of chronic conditions. Health policy is needed that prioritizes aging well in place as an "upstream" approach to address SDH and thereby improve health outcomes and promote quality of life. Globally, nurses are well positioned to advocate for such policy, given their commitment to fostering social inclusion and quality of life for older adults. This article presents a policy submission, made by nurses enrolled in a graduate health policy course, to Canada's Standing Committee on Human Resources and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities, for the Committee's report on Advancing Inclusion of and Quality of Life for Seniors ().


Subject(s)
Health Policy , Health Promotion/statistics & numerical data , Healthy Aging , Quality of Life , Social Determinants of Health/standards , Aged , Canada , Health Status Disparities , Humans , National Health Programs , Nurse's Role
17.
Nurs Philos ; 20(4): e12282, 2019 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31478347

ABSTRACT

Nursing, with its socially embedded theory and practice, inevitably operates in the realm of power and politics. One of these political sites is that of religion, which to varying degrees continues to shape beliefs about health and illness, the delivery of healthcare services and the nurse-patient encounter. In this paper, I attempt to complicate nursing's views on religion and politics in healthcare, with the intent of thinking critically and philosophically about questions that arise at the intersection of religion, politics and nursing/healthcare. These questions include the following: What is the domain of religion and politics? How (non)religious are the contemporary societies in which nurses practice? What are the variations and implications of secularism? How is religion entangled with other intersecting social relations of power? How does a political reading of religion and politics matter to the concerns of nursing?


Subject(s)
Nursing , Philosophy, Nursing , Politics , Religion , Delivery of Health Care , Humans
18.
J Relig Health ; 58(3): 908-925, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28865034

ABSTRACT

Healthcare services are increasingly being provided in the home. At the same time, these home contexts are changing as global migration has brought unprecedented diversity both in the recipients of care, and home health workers. In this paper, we present findings of a Canadian study that examined the negotiation of religious and ethnic plurality in home health. Qualitative analysis of the data from interviews and observations with 46 participants-clients, administrators, home healthcare workers-revealed how religion is expressed and 'managed' in home health services.


Subject(s)
Caregivers/psychology , Cultural Competency , Home Health Nursing/methods , Religion , Animals , Canada , Ethnicity , Female , Home Health Nursing/organization & administration , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Qualitative Research , Religion and Psychology , Sex Factors
19.
Qual Health Res ; 29(4): 510-521, 2019 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29542400

ABSTRACT

This article applies a micro-meso-macro analytical framework to understand clinicians' experiences and perspectives of using patient-reported outcome and experience measures (PROMs and PREMs) in routine hospital-based palliative care. We structure our discussion through qualitative analysis of a design and implementation project for using an electronic tablet-based tool among hospital-based palliative clinicians to assess patients' and their family caregivers' quality of life concerns and experiences of care. Our analysis identified three categories of practice tensions shaping clinicians' use of PROMs and PREMs in routine care: tensions surrounding implementation, tensions in standardization and quantification, and tensions that arose from scope of practice concerns. Our findings highlight that clinicians necessarily work within the confluence of multiple system priorities, that navigating these priorities can result in irreducible practice tensions, and that awareness of these tensions is a critical consideration when integrating PROMs and PREMs into routine practice.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Health Personnel/psychology , Patient Reported Outcome Measures , Adult , Female , Focus Groups , Hospitals , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Palliative Care , Quality of Life , Surveys and Questionnaires
20.
Nurs Inq ; 26(2): e12276, 2019 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30443956

ABSTRACT

While for decades nursing has advocated for theory-informed practice, more recent attention has tended to focus on mid-range theory rather than the earlier focus on developing grand theory to encompass all of nursing practice. However, there has been continued interest in the holistic nursing community on grand theory and, in particular, on Integral Theory. Although Integral Theory's four-quadrant (AQAL) perspective is familiar in nursing, little is known about how it is being used by nurses in direct practice. The purpose of this interpretive descriptive study was to provide a practice-based perspective on Ken Wilber's Integral Theory in professional nursing practice. The following research question was investigated: How does Integral Theory assist nurses in describing and understanding their professional work? Nurses participating in this study used Integral Theory as a map or heuristic that gave structure to an inquiry process in professional nursing practice and in nursing education in a manner that was holonic, multiperspectival, and self-reflective. Challenges constraining nurses' use of Integral Theory included its intricacy, as well as contextual factors in practice environments. Implications for nursing practice and education for the use of Integral Theory's meta-framework are described.


Subject(s)
Nursing Process/trends , Psychological Theory , Humans , Interviews as Topic/methods , Nursing Theory , Qualitative Research
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