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1.
Health Care Women Int ; 45(5): 579-599, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37010454

ABSTRACT

In this qualitative community-based research, we explore service providers' use of activism-based resources and the supports they need to use activism as a tool to promote the mental health and wellbeing of racialized immigrant women. 19 service providers working in settlement and mental health services in the Greater Toronto Area, Canada, participated in one of three focus groups. We analyzed the data using a postcolonial feminist lens. Service providers' understandings of activism, strategies for promoting client mental health and wellbeing, and organizational barriers shaping their practice emerged as relevant. We offer recommendations for building activism-based resources, programs and services that include collaborations with racialized immigrant women communities and action at the organizational level to support service provider practice.


Subject(s)
Emigrants and Immigrants , Mental Health , Female , Humans , Canada , Women's Health , Feminism
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33081204

ABSTRACT

Canadian, US, and UK public health and clinical research has identified barriers to health service access for Two-Spirit, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, non-binary, and intersex (2SLGBTQ+) communities. While offering important insight into the health service experiences of 2SLGBTQ+ communities, this body of research only recently, and still only minimally, reports on home care access experiences. Drawing on key findings from the 2SLGBTQ+ Home Care Access Project, a mixed-methods, Ontario-wide study, this paper animates an Access and Equity Framework, using participant stories and perspectives to underscore the relevance and effectiveness of the Framework as a tool to support systematic organizational assessment, evaluation, and implementation of access and equity strategies. Home care organizations can use this tool to assess their programs and services along a continuum of intentionally inviting, unintentionally inviting, unintentionally disinviting, and intentionally disinviting care for 2SLGBTQ+ people. To support this process, the framework includes six indicators of access to care: community engagement, leadership, environment, policies and processes, education and training, and programs and services.


Subject(s)
Health Services Accessibility , Home Care Services , Sexual and Gender Minorities , Transgender Persons , Female , Humans , Male , Ontario
3.
Can J Aging ; 37(2): 121-132, 2018 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29553004

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACTIt is critical to ensure that long-term care (LTC) homes are sensitive to the needs of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) older adults. However, the extent to which the LTC home sector has adopted recommended strategies is unknown. This qualitative study reports findings from two initiatives: Semi-structured telephone interviews with Canadian LTC home administrators on strategies adopted to support LGBT inclusivity (n = 32), and discussions with participants attending a 2-day meeting on supporting LGBT inclusivity in LTC (n = 25). We found that LGBT inclusivity training was the most commonly adopted strategy among the LTC homes surveyed. Study findings further suggested that practices more visible to residents and families, such as LGBT-themed programming, inclusive language and symbols, or joint initiatives with LGBT communities, were less commonly adopted because of anticipated negative resident/family reactions. The importance and benefits of comprehensive strategies that include staff, residents, and family are discussed.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Homes for the Aged/organization & administration , Long-Term Care/organization & administration , Nursing Homes/organization & administration , Sexual and Gender Minorities , Attitude of Health Personnel , British Columbia , Health Personnel/education , Humans , Independent Living , Ontario , Qualitative Research , Quebec , Surveys and Questionnaires
4.
Int J Nurs Educ Scholarsh ; 14(1)2017 Jul 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28749781

ABSTRACT

Canadian nurses have a social mandate to address health inequities for the populations they serve, as well as to speak out on professional and broader social issues. Although Canadian nursing education supports the role of nurses as advocates for social justice and leadership for health care reform, little is known about how nurse educators understand activism and how this translates in the classroom. A comparative life history study using purposeful sampling and a critical feminist lens was undertaken to explore political activism in nursing and how nurse educators foster political practice among their students. Findings from interviews and focus groups with 26 Ontario nurse educators and nursing students suggested that neoliberal dynamics in both the practice setting and in higher education have constrained nurses' activist practice and favour a technical rational approach to nursing education. Implications and strategies to inspire political action in nursing education are discussed.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Education, Nursing/methods , Political Activism/trends , Social Justice , Canada , Female , Humans , Male , Philosophy, Nursing , Students, Nursing
5.
Health Care Women Int ; 38(2): 187-204, 2017 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27797680

ABSTRACT

Although immigrant women bear a disproportionate burden of chronic disease and mental health issues, limited research addresses how to promote their mental wellbeing. The authors first describe grounded theory findings from community-based focus group research with 57 racialized immigrant women in Toronto, Canada that used a critical gender and intersectional lens to explore the links among settlement, wellbeing, and activism. Secondly, a community mobilization strategy is described whereby racialized immigrant women discuss activism as a feature of wellbeing in various language communities while creating meaningful health promotion resources. Implications for creating activism-based initiatives to promote women's wellbeing are discussed.


Subject(s)
Community Networks , Emigrants and Immigrants/psychology , Mental Health , Politics , Women's Health , Adult , Aged , Community-Based Participatory Research , Female , Focus Groups , Grounded Theory , Humans , Middle Aged , Resilience, Psychological
6.
Policy Polit Nurs Pract ; 17(4): 218-230, 2016 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28558602

ABSTRACT

Recent nursing research using a critical feminist lens challenges the prevailing view of political inertia in nursing. This comparative life history study using a critical feminist lens explores the relevance of activism with four generations of Canadian nurses. Purposeful sampling of Ontario nurses resulted in 40 participants who were diverse in terms of generation, practice setting, and activist practice. Interviews and focus groups were completed with the sample of Ontario registered nurses or undergraduate and graduate nursing students: 8 Generation X, 9 Generation Y (Millennials), 20 Boomers, and 3 Overboomers. Factors such as professional norms and personal and organizational supports shaped contradictory nursing activist identities, practices, and impacts. Gendered norms, organizational dynamics, and the political landscape influenced the meanings nurses attributed to critical incidents and influences that prompted activism inside and outside the workplace, shaping the transformative potential of nursing. Despite its limitations, the study has implications for creating professional and organizational supports for consideration of health politics and policy, and spaces for dialogue to support practice and research aligned with social justice goals.


Subject(s)
Career Choice , Feminism , Intergenerational Relations , Nurse's Role , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Canada , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Interprofessional Relations , Middle Aged , Philosophy, Nursing , Social Change , Young Adult
7.
Health Soc Care Community ; 23(3): 282-91, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25427428

ABSTRACT

This paper reports qualitative findings from a pilot study that explored the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) education needs of home-care service providers working in one large, urban Canadian city. The pilot study builds upon research that has documented barriers to health services for diversely situated LGBTQ people, which function to limit access to good-quality healthcare. LGBTQ activists, organisations and allies have underscored the need for health provider education related to the unique health and service experiences of sexual and gender minority communities. However, the home-care sector is generally overlooked in this important body of research literature. We used purposeful convenience sampling to conduct four focus groups and two individual interviews with a total of 15 professionally diverse home-care service providers. Data collection was carried out from January 2011 to July 2012 and data were analysed using grounded theory methods towards the identification of the overarching theme, 'provider education' and it had two sub-themes: (i) experiences of LGBTQ education; and (ii) recommendations for LGBTQ education. The study findings raise important questions about limited and uneven access to adequate LGBTQ education for home-care service providers, suggest important policy implications for the education and health sectors, and point to the need for anti-oppression principles in the development of education initiatives.


Subject(s)
Health Personnel/education , Home Care Services , Sexual and Gender Minorities , Adult , Canada , Female , Focus Groups , Grounded Theory , Humans , Male , Pilot Projects , Qualitative Research
8.
ANS Adv Nurs Sci ; 37(3): 271-80, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25102217

ABSTRACT

The aim of this analysis is to contribute to an understanding of emancipatory nursing in the context of higher education. Engagement with formative studies that used critical feminist methodologies led to my research focus on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) health in my academic research program. Dimensions of emancipatory nursing include reflexivity, transformative learning, interdisciplinarity, praxis, and situated privilege. Several critical feminist methodologies are addressed: feminist ethnography, community-based participatory action research (CBPAR), and comparative life history. Commonalities across methodologies illustrate the potential for emancipatory outcomes/goals.


Subject(s)
Anthropology, Cultural , Attitude of Health Personnel , Feminism , Health Policy , Healthcare Disparities , Nurse-Patient Relations , Social Justice , Bisexuality , Canada , Community-Based Participatory Research , Education, Nursing/methods , Female , Homosexuality, Female , Homosexuality, Male , Humans , Male , Nursing Research , Transgender Persons
9.
Nurs Inq ; 21(1): 39-50, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23517526

ABSTRACT

This article explores how the intersections of gendered, racialized and neoliberal dynamics reproduce social inequality and shape the violence that nurses face. Grounded in the interviews and focus groups conducted with a purposeful sample of 17 registered nurses (RNs) and registered practical nurses (RPNs) currently working in Ontario's mental health sector, our analysis underscores the need to move beyond reductionist notions of violence as simply individual physical or psychological events. While acknowledging that violence is a very real and disturbing experience for individual nurses, our article casts light on the importance of a broader, power structure analysis of violence experienced by nurses in this sector, arguing that effective redress lies beyond blame shifting between clients/patients and nurses. Our analysis illustrates how assumptions about gender, race and care operate in the context of global, neoliberal forces to reinforce, intensify and create, as well as obscure, structural violence through mechanisms of individualization and normalization.


Subject(s)
Nurse-Patient Relations , Psychiatric Nursing , Violence , Adult , Female , Focus Groups , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Middle Aged , Ontario , Philosophy, Nursing , Racial Groups , Sex Factors
10.
Nurs Res Pract ; 2012: 576586, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22754696

ABSTRACT

This paper reports on grounded theory findings that are relevant to promoting the mental health and well-being of immigrant women in Canada. The findings illustrate how relationships among settlement factors and dynamics of empowerment had implications for "becoming resilient" as immigrant women and how various health promotion approaches enhanced their well-being. Dimensions of empowerment were embedded in the content and process of the feminist health promotion approach used in this study. Four focus groups were completed in Toronto, Ontario, Canada with 35 racialized immigrant women who represented diverse countries of origin: 25 were from Africa; others were equally represented from South Asia (5), Asia (5), and Central or South America and the Caribbean (5). Participants represented diverse languages, family dynamics, and educational backgrounds. One focus group was conducted in Somali; three were conducted in English. Constructivist grounded theory, theoretical sampling, and a critical feminist approach were chosen to be congruent with health promotion research that fostered women's empowerment. Findings foreground women's agency in the study process, the ways that immigrant women name and frame issues relevant to their lives, and the interplay among individual, family, community, and structural dynamics shaping their well-being. Implications for mental health promotion are discussed.

11.
ISRN Nurs ; 2012: 161097, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23316387

ABSTRACT

Well-documented health research points to trans people's vulnerability to health inequities that are linked to deeply embedded structural and social determinants of health. Gender and work, as social determinants of health for trans people, both shape and are shaped by multiple factors such as support networks, social environments, income and social status, shelter, and personal health practices. There is a gap in the nursing literature in regards to research on work and health for diverse trans people and a virtual silence on the particular issues of trans-identified health providers. This qualitative study used comparative life history methodology and purposeful sampling to examine links among work, career, and health for transmen who are health providers. Semistructured interviews were completed with four Canadian transmen involved in health care professional and/or practice contexts with diverse professions, age, work, and transitioning experiences. Critical gender analysis showed that unique and gender-related critical events and influences shape continuities and discontinuities in their careerlives. This strength-based approach foregrounds how resilience and growth emerged through participants' articulation with everyday gender dynamics. These findings have implications for nursing research, education, and practice that include an understanding of how trans providers "do transgender work" and supporting them in that process.

12.
Nurs Inq ; 18(4): 313-24, 2011 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22050617

ABSTRACT

Gender, sexuality and the participatory dimensions of a comparative life history policy study In this paper, I explore how a critical feminist lens was a crucial element in creating a participatory policy study which used a qualitative design and comparative life history methodology. This study focused on Canadian nurses' political practice related to advocacy for lesbian health. Findings show that the combination of the gender lens and life history approach offers potential to create knowledge in ways aligned with health-promoting and emancipatory outcomes. However, the nature of participation and interaction by researcher and participants is contexualized and contested given complex dynamics of power that shape all aspects of this doctoral study process. The critical feminist lens with its focus on reflexivity informed the content and process of knowledge production in this study and shaped key turning points: the ways in which this policy study was conceptualized, the choice of comparative life history methodology, ethical considerations, data collection and analysis and representation of findings. Life history is unlikely to be the methodology that first comes to mind when undertaking a policy study. Its historical roots are associated with biographical, oral history and narrative approaches, which typically aim to elicit understanding of lived experience. Yet, it was this very aspect, this focus on lived experience, which rendered life history methodology fitting as I contemplated how to examine the relationship between nurses and policy. I was interested in understanding nurses' political practice, how policy influenced nurses' capacity to advocate in their everyday lives, as well as nurses' impacts on policy processes and their larger social worlds.


Subject(s)
Feminism , Health Policy , Homosexuality, Female , Nurses/psychology , Patient Advocacy , Canada , Community-Based Participatory Research , Female , Humans , Life Change Events , Nursing Methodology Research , Qualitative Research
13.
Int J Equity Health ; 10: 40, 2011 Sep 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21957894

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: This article considers how health services access and equity documents represent the problem of access to health services and what the effects of that representation might be for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) communities. We conducted a critical discourse analysis on selected access and equity documents using a gender-based diversity framework as determined by two objectives: 1) to identify dominant and counter discourses in health services access and equity literature; and 2) to develop understanding of how particular discourses impact the inclusion, or not, of LGBT communities in health services access and equity frameworks.The analysis was conducted in response to public health and clinical research that has documented barriers to health services access for LGBT communities including institutionalized heterosexism, biphobia, and transphobia, invisibility and lack of health provider knowledge and comfort. The analysis was also conducted as the first step of exploring LGBT access issues in home care services for LGBT populations in Ontario, Canada. METHODS: A critical discourse analysis of selected health services access and equity documents, using a gender-based diversity framework, was conducted to offer insight into dominant and counter discourses underlying health services access and equity initiatives. RESULTS: A continuum of five discourses that characterize the health services access and equity literature were identified including two dominant discourses: 1) multicultural discourse, and 2) diversity discourse; and three counter discourses: 3) social determinants of health (SDOH) discourse; 4) anti-oppression (AOP) discourse; and 5) citizen/social rights discourse. CONCLUSIONS: The analysis offers a continuum of dominant and counter discourses on health services access and equity as determined from a gender-based diversity perspective. The continuum of discourses offers a framework to identify and redress organizational assumptions about, and ideological commitments to, sexual and gender diversity and health services access and equity. Thus, the continuum of discourses may serve as an important element of a health care organization's access and equity framework for the evaluation of access to good quality care for diverse LGBT populations. More specfically, the analysis offers four important points of consideration in relation to the development of a health services access and equity framework.

14.
ANS Adv Nurs Sci ; 33(3): 219-33, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20693831

ABSTRACT

This article discusses findings from a qualitative policy study using comparative life history methodology with 10 Canadian female nurses who were lesbian health advocates. A critical gender lens was used to examine policy literature and to frame an analysis of how nurses experienced and understood their engagement with policy by focusing on their "policy talk." The findings suggest that nurses participate in policy processes in multiple ways through their everyday political work, but their practice is contested and contextualized by tensions between dominant and counter discourses of policy. Complex gendered social relations structure diverse nurses' lives as policy actors and regulate nurses' knowledges and practices.


Subject(s)
Feminism , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Nurse's Role , Patient Advocacy/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Perception , Adult , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Ontario , Self Disclosure , Surveys and Questionnaires , Women's Health/legislation & jurisprudence
15.
Policy Polit Nurs Pract ; 11(4): 317-25, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21531967

ABSTRACT

This article explores how the dynamics of violence and support for nurses are influenced by the intersections of race, gender, and other social relations in various practice settings. Utilizing a qualitative study design, situated in the naturalistic and critical paradigms, this article is grounded in the experiences of key informants (KIs), each possessing significant expertise on issues of equity and violence, as well as insight into the current practice settings in Ontario, Canada. The individual KI interviews were analyzed using conventional qualitative content analysis, with its focus on capturing emerging insights. The findings reflect the everyday nature of gendered and racialized violence, the influence of setting and the effectiveness of existing resources. Professional, organizational, and broader policy implications are discussed to support diversely situated nurses within their various practice environments.


Subject(s)
Ethnicity/statistics & numerical data , Nurses/statistics & numerical data , Occupational Health/statistics & numerical data , Violence/statistics & numerical data , Workplace , Female , Focus Groups , Humans , Interprofessional Relations , Male , Nurse-Patient Relations , Nursing Care/methods , Ontario/epidemiology , Practice Management/standards , Practice Management/trends , Qualitative Research , Risk Assessment , Sex Factors
16.
ANS Adv Nurs Sci ; 32(2): 158-72, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19461232

ABSTRACT

This article describes findings from a qualitative policy study focused on female nurses' activism in relation to lesbian health. Critical feminist analysis and comparative life history methodology were applied to career histories obtained from 10 diversely situated female nurses across Ontario, Canada. The findings show that nursing activist practices are informed by advocacy experiences that foster inclusive professional and community education plus formal education processes that shape their political socialization. Implications for nursing theory include the development of political knowledges and practices that support caring science, sociopolitical knowing, and primary healthcare nursing practice in a community context.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Nurses/psychology , Patient Advocacy , Politics , Women's Health , Adult , Cultural Diversity , Curriculum , Female , Feminism , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Humans , Middle Aged , Nurse's Role/psychology , Nursing Methodology Research , Nursing Theory , Ontario , Prejudice , Qualitative Research , Self Disclosure , Surveys and Questionnaires
17.
Can J Nurs Res ; 39(4): 75-92, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18277789

ABSTRACT

This case study of community nurses in the Canadian province of Ontario explores the relevance of power relations to nursing ethical inquiry. Public health nurses critically reflected on their role in challenging social inequities as they generated evidence to inform practice. In the process, they developed a policy resolution articulating values and principles for ethical nursing research with diversely situated sexual minorities. The author uses a qualitative case study design and applies a feminist bioethics framework using critical literature to analyze this document and the practice context. The findings suggest that dynamics of power, including gender, influence nurses' ability to advocate for sexual minorities through research, prompting the development of a public statement on knowledge production. There are implications for undertaking nursing ethical inquiries that explore how dominant and counter-discourses and multiple dimensions of power shape nurses' moral agency in challenging the status quo.


Subject(s)
Morals , Nurses , Sexual Behavior , Female , Humans , Male , Minority Groups , Ontario , Retrospective Studies , Sex Factors
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