1. "It's only the skin colour, otherwise we are all people": the changing face of the Australian nurse.
- Author
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DYWILI, SOPHIA, O'BRIEN, LOUISE, and ANDERSON, JUDITH
- Subjects
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RACISM , *IMMIGRANTS , *TEAMS in the workplace , *NURSES' attitudes , *FOCUS groups , *CONFIDENCE , *BLACK people , *RURAL conditions , *INTERVIEWING , *QUALITATIVE research , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *NURSING practice , *JUDGMENT sampling , *STATISTICAL sampling , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *DATA analysis software , *THEMATIC analysis , *TRUST , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this paper is to report on the experience of racial discrimination by black sub-Saharan overseas qualified nurses working in rural Australia. Background: The arrival of black African people as skilled professional migrants is relatively new in rural Australia. The presence of black sub-Saharan African nurses in Australian healthcare facilities is changing the face of the Australian nurse. Australia, like other developed countries, has been receiving migrant nurses from the African continent in a bid to reverse its critical nurse shortage. Literature has shown that globally, overseas qualified nurses of colour have encountered work challenges that have included racial discrimination. Study design and methods: A qualitative hermeneutical phenomenological approach was used. Eighteen nurses were purposively selected using personal invite and a snowballing technique. Data collection involved individual face to face interviews and a focus group discussion. Results: The exploration of experiences revealed issues of race and colour among colleagues and between patients and overseas qualified nurses. Overseas qualified nurses experienced incidents of Objective: The aim of this paper is to report on the experience of racial discrimination by black sub-Saharan overseas qualified nurses working in rural Australia. Background: The arrival of black African people as skilled professional migrants is relatively new in rural Australia. The presence of black sub-Saharan African nurses in Australian healthcare facilities is changing the face of the Australian nurse. Australia, like other developed countries, has been receiving migrant nurses from the African continent in a bid to reverse its critical nurse shortage. Literature has shown that globally, overseas qualified nurses of colour have encountered work challenges that have included racial discrimination. Study design and methods: A qualitative hermeneutical phenomenological approach was used. Eighteen nurses were purposively selected using personal invite and a snowballing technique. Data collection involved individual face to face interviews and a focus group discussion. Results: The exploration of experiences revealed issues of race and colour among colleagues and between patients and overseas qualified nurses. Overseas qualified nurses experienced incidents of Nurse managers need to be more vigilant in monitoring staff interactions in their Units. Understanding and support for diversity at the workplace by all nurses will improve patient and staff safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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