• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 19
  • 17
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 45
  • 45
  • 17
  • 16
  • 7
  • 6
  • 5
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
41

Actions politiques d’infirmières francophones canadiennes afin d’améliorer les conditions de vie des personnes et communautés : une approche historique et une ethnographie collaborative en sciences infirmières

McCready, Geneviève 06 July 2020 (has links)
D’après les écrits scientifiques, les infirmières auraient du mal à exercer leur pouvoir d’influence dans le but de modifier les politiques en faveur de la santé. Ces difficultés vécues par des infirmières en santé communautaire importent puisque d’une part, les actions politiques sont nécessaires à la réduction des inégalités sociales qui minent la santé des populations et d’autre part, ces infirmières constituent des témoins privilégiées des conditions de vie nuisibles. Cette thèse doctorale s’intéresse aux conceptions et pratiques en matière d’action politique chez des infirmières francophones canadiennes exerçant en santé communautaire. Son regard porte spécifiquement sur les contextes du travail des infirmières qui influencent leurs pratiques. Les objectifs sont : - Décrire les conceptions des infirmières francophones canadiennes quant à l’action politique en santé communautaire; - Témoigner des pratiques des infirmières francophones canadiennes pour améliorer les conditions de vie des personnes et communautés; - Rendre compte des éléments contextuels qui touchent les pratiques infirmières en matière d’action politique. L’étude présente deux volets : une enquête historique réalisée dans le Bulletin des gardes-malades catholiques du Canada entre 1934 et 1959, et une ethnographie collaborative menée auprès de 21 infirmières travaillant dans un Centre de santé communautaire. Les résultats montrent l’attachement des infirmières aux valeurs de justice sociale et de respect de la dignité humaine. Certains savoirs infirmiers – tels que les savoirs éthiques, la défense de l’accès aux soins et les soins de proximité – sont mis en danger par la domination dans le réseau de la santé du modèle biomédical et de la reddition de comptes. Les résultats mettent en évidence le rôle joué par les organisations en santé dans l’avènement d’opportunités pour les infirmières de mener des actions permettant de perpétuer leurs pratiques d’équité. Ces constats mènent à l’élaboration de pistes émancipatrices pour la profession infirmière. En somme, cette thèse jette un nouveau regard sur l’héritage du savoir infirmier francophone au Canada. Elle rend compte de la diversité des actions politiques chez les infirmières et questionne les obstacles contemporains à l’exercice de ce rôle.
42

Ethnographie institutionnelle du travail des infirmières soignantes en milieu hospitalier

Stake-Doucet, Natalie 08 1900 (has links)
Cette ethnographie institutionnelle décrit et analyse le travail infirmier en milieu hospitalier et la toile des relations sociales qui le régulent. De nombreux écrits en sciences infirmières portent sur le travail infirmier, mais peu s’intéressent à l’interrelation entre le travail infirmier et l’hôpital comme structure sociopolitique et historique qui régule et organise le travail au quotidien. Loin d’être une simple toile de fond, l’hôpital est un lieu de socialisation fondamental pour les infirmières ; la majorité des infirmières travaillent dans un hôpital et la formation infirmière se déroule au moins en partie en milieu hospitalier depuis plus d’un siècle. Cette ethnographie institutionnelle, qui s’est déroulée sur cinq mois dans un hôpital montréalais, explore et analyse la régulation du travail infirmier par l’institution hospitalière. Les observations, les entrevues et l’analyse de documents institutionnels ont permis de décrire en détail ce que font les infirmières au quotidien en milieu hospitalier. Des points de tensions ont été identifiés relatifs au système des professions, à l’intériorisation de la hiérarchie professionnelle structurée par l’hôpital et comment l’hôpital invisibilise le travail infirmier. Cette thèse suggère que l’hôpital est un médiateur dans les relations interprofessionnelles qui sont structurées à l’intérieur d’une hiérarchie rigide, héritée d’une vision victorienne et reproduite depuis plus d’un siècle, dans laquelle sont socialisées les infirmières. Cette hiérarchie est caractérisée par l’allocation débalancée de la technologie entre différents groupes professionnels ainsi que leur rapport aux lieux physiques dans leur travail. Finalement, cette thèse propose une vision novatrice et perturbatrice de la compréhension de l’hôpital, de son histoire et de son rôle dans la socialisation des infirmières qui pourrait servir à aider les infirmières à clarifier et investir leur agentivité politique. / This institutional ethnography describes and analyses nursing work in hospitals and the web of social relations that regulates it. Many writings in nursing science have explored nursing work, but few explore the inter-relation of nursing work and the hospital as a socio-political and historical institution that regulates daily work. Far from being a simple backdrop, hospitals are fundamental to the socialization of nurses; the majority of nurses work in hospitals and, for over a century, they have been the main setting of nursing education. This institutional ethnography took place over five months in a Montreal hospital, explores and analyzes the regulation of nursing work by the hospital institution. The observations, interviews and analysis of institutional texts produced a detailed description of the daily work of bedside hospital nurses. Areas of tension were identified relative to the system of professions, of the internalization of the professional hierarchy as it is structured by the hospital and how hospitals render nursing work invisible. This thesis suggests that hospitals mediate inter-professional relationships, that are structured within a rigid hierarchy, inherited from the Victorian epoch and that socialize nurses who then also reproduce it themselves. This hierarchy remains visible today notably through the uneven allowance of technology between health professions as well as their relationship to the physical space within the hospital. Finally, this thesis proposes an innovative and disruptive perspective on the understanding of hospitals, their history and role in the socialization of nursing that could help clarify what is nurses’ political agency and how that political agency can be invested.
43

"She did what she could" ... A history of the regulation of midwifery practice in Queensland 1859-1912.

Davies, Rita Ann January 2003 (has links)
The role of midwife has been an integral part of the culture of childbirth in Queensland throughout its history, but it is a role that has been modified and reshaped over time. This thesis explores the factors that underpinned a crucial aspect of that modification and reshaping. Specifically, the thesis examines the factors that contributed to the statutory regulation of midwives that began in 1912 and argues that it was that event that etched the development of midwifery practice for the remainder of the twentieth century. In 1859, when Queensland seceded from New South Wales, childbirth was very much a private event that took place predominantly in the home attended by a woman who acted as midwife. In the fifty-threeyears that followed, childbirth became a medical event that was the subject of scrutiny by the medical profession and the state. The thesis argues that, the year 1912 marks the point at which the practice of midwifery by midwives in Queensland began a transition from lay practice in the home to qualified status in the hospital. In 1912, through the combined efforts of the medical profession, senior nurses and the state, midwives in Queensland were brought under the jurisdiction of the Nurses' Registration Board as "midwifery nurses". The Nurses' Registration Board was established as part of the Health Act Amendment Act of 1911. The inclusion of midwives within a regulatory authority for nurses represented the beginning of the end of midwifery practice as a discrete occupational role and marked its redefinition as a nursing specialty. It was a redefinition that suited the three major stakeholders. The medical profession perceived lay midwives to be a disjointed and uncoordinated body of women whose practice contributed to needless loss of life in childbirth. Further, lay midwives inhibited the generalist medical practitioners' access to family practice. Trained nurses looked upon midwifery as an extension of nursing and one which offered them an area in which they might specialise in order to enhance their occupational status and career prospects. The state was keen to improve birth rates and to reduce infant mortality. It was prepared to accept that the regulation of midwives under the auspices of nursing was a reasonable and proper strategy and one that might assist it to meet its objectives. It was these separate, but complementary, agendas that prompted the medical profession and the state to debate the culture of childbirth, to examine the role of midwives within it, and to support the amalgamation of nursing and midwifery practice. This thesis argues that the medical profession was the most active and persistent protagonist in the moves to limit the scope of midwives and to claim midwifery practice as a medical specialty. Through a campaign to defame midwives and to reduce their credibility as birth attendants, the medical profession enlisted the help of senior nurses and the state in order to redefine midwifery practice as a nursing role and to cultivate the notion of the midwife as a subordinate to the medical practitioner. While this thesis contests the intervention of the medical profession in the reproductive lives of women and the occupational territory of midwives, it concedes that there was a need to initiate change. Drawing on evidence submitted at Inquests into deaths associated with childbirth, the thesis illuminates a childbirth culture that was characterised by anguish and suffering and it depicts the lay midwife as a further peril to an already hazardous event that helps to explain medical intervention in childbirth and, in part, to excuse it. The strategies developed by the medical profession and the state to bring about the occupational transition of midwives from lay to qualified were based upon a conceptual unity between the work of midwives and nurses. That conceptualisation was reinforced by a practical training schedule that deployed midwives within the institution of the lying-in hospital in order to receive the formal instruction that underpinned their entitlement to inclusion on the Register of Midwifery Nurses held by the Nurses' Registration Board. The structure that was put in place in Queensland in 1912 to control and monitor the practice of midwives was consistent with the policies of other Australian states at that time. It was an arrangement that gained acceptance and strength over time so that by the end of the twentieth century, throughout Australia, the practice of midwifery by midwives was, generally, consequent upon prior qualification as a Registered Nurse. In Queensland, in the opening years of the twenty-first century, the role of midwife remains tied to that of the nurse but the balance of power has shifted from the medical profession to the nursing profession. At this time, with the exception of a small number of midwives who have acquired their qualification in midwifery from an overseas country that recognises midwifery practice as a discipline independent of nursing, the vast majority of midwives practising in Queensland do so on the basis of their registration as a nurse. Methodology This thesis explores the factors that influenced the decision to regulate midwifery practice in Queensland in 1912 and the means by which that regulation was achieved. The historical approach underpins this research. The historical approach is an inductive process that is an appropriate method to employ for several reasons. First, it assists in identifying the origins of midwifery as a social role performed by women. Second, it presents a systematic way of analysing the evidence concerning the development of the midwifery role and the status of the midwife in society. Third, it highlights the political, social and economic influences which have impacted on midwifery in the past and which have had a bearing on subsequent midwifery practice in Queensland. Fourth, the historical approach exposes important chronological elements pertaining to the research question. Finally, it assists the exposure of themes in the sources that demonstrate the behaviour of key individuals and governing authorities and their connection to the transition of midwifery from lay to qualified. Consequently, through analysing the sources and collating the emerging evidence, a cogent account of interpretations of midwifery history in Queensland may be constructed. Data collection and analysis The data collection began with secondary source material in the formative stages of the research and this provided direction for the primary sources that were later accessed. The primary source material that is employed includes testimonies submitted at Inquests into maternal and neonatal deaths; parliamentary records; legislation, government gazettes, and medical journals. The data has been analysed through an inductive process and its presentation has combined exploration and narration to produce an accurate and plausible account. The story that unfolds is complex and confusing. Its primary focus lies in ascertaining why and how midwifery practice was regulated in Queensland. The thesis therefore explores the factors that influenced the decision to regulate midwifery practice in Queensland in 1912 and the means by which that regulation was achieved. Limitations of the study The limitations of the study relate to the documentary evidence and to the cultural group that form the basis of the study. It is acknowledged that historical accounts rely upon the integrity of the historian to select and interpret the data in a fair and plausible manner. In the case of this thesis, one of its limitations is that midwives did not speak for themselves but were, instead, spoken for by medical practitioners and parliamentarians. As a consequence, the coronial and magisterial testimonies that are employed constitute a limitation in that while they reveal the ways in which lay midwifery occurred, they relate only to those childbirth events that resulted in death. Thus, they may be said to represent the minority of cases involving the lay midwife rather than to offer a broader and perhaps more balanced picture. A second limitation is that the accounts are recorded by an official such as a member of the police or of the Coroner's Office and are sanctioned by the witness with a signature or, more often, a cross. It is therefore possible that the recorder has guided these accounts and that they are not the spontaneous evidence of the witness. Those witnesses and the culture they represent are drawn predominantly from non- Indigenous working class. Thus, a third limitation is that the principal ethnic group featured in this thesis has been women of European descent who were born in Queensland or other parts of Australia. This focus has originated from the data itself and has not been contrived. However, it does impose a restriction to the scope of the study.
44

Beyond Nightingale: The Transformation of Nursing in Victorian and World War I Literature

Benham, M. Renee 12 June 2017 (has links)
No description available.
45

The professional development of Black South Africa nurses 1908-1994 : a historical perspective

Esterhuizen, Johanna Maria 11 February 2014 (has links)
The early professional history of black South African nurses has not been the principal focus of local historians. Consequently, a qualitative historical inquiry was conducted into the available literature on the economic, social, political and cultural factors that influenced the professional development of black South African nurses from 1908–1994. Non-probability, purposive sampling assisted in assembling a corpus of historically rich data for analysis using time-specific a priori codes. The findings revealed that; culturally, black South African nurses had to adapt to a Western-dominated scientific health view; educationally, they had to master specialised formal Western terminology presented in a ‘foreign’ language (English) and, socio-politically, they had to adapt to being regarded as an elitist middle-class in the black community while remaining marginalised in the white-dominated workplace. Recommendations include expanding the historical research base, designing more effective strategies for promoting cultural sensitivity, and prioritising the focus on teaching and student retention. / Health Studies / M.A. (Health Studies)

Page generated in 0.0955 seconds