30 results
Search Results
2. A Balancing Act When Children Are Young: Women's Experiences in Shared Parenting Arrangements as Survivors of Domestic Violence.
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Archer-Kuhn, Beth, Hughes, Judith, Saini, Michael, Tam, Dora, Beltrano, Natalie, and Still, Marni
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CHILD care , *RESEARCH methodology , *DOMESTIC violence , *INTERVIEWING , *EXPERIENCE , *PARENTING , *HEALTH literacy , *QUALITATIVE research , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PARENT-child relationships , *THEMATIC analysis , *EMOTIONS , *SOCIAL services , *DIVORCE - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to add to the research literature and begin to fill the gap in knowledge about shared parenting arrangements for women with young children and who have experienced domestic violence (DV), in three Canadian provinces; Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario. Method: This paper reports on the qualitative findings from a mixed methods study on shared parenting from women with children ages 4 and under. Twenty women participated in one-on-one individual interviews through electronic platform utilizing Zoom. Thematic analysis is used to analyze the data. Results: Despite efforts to not exclusively recruit women who had experienced domestic violence (DV) from their former partner, all participants identified as survivors of DV and ongoing survivors of DV, specifically, coercive controlling behaviours. Five themes describe the women's experiences of shared parenting with young children: 1) walking a tight-rope; 2) navigating post-separation relationships; 3) emotional realities of shared parenting; 4) shared parenting outcomes; and, 5) structural challenges. Conclusions: This paper not only adds to the significant and longstanding gap in knowledge directly from women with children ages 4 and under in shared parenting relationships, and who have experienced DV, and also helps to inform social service and legal actors. It is timely with the amendments to the Divorce Act in Canada which now includes DV as a factor in determining the best interests of the child. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Humor: A Grief Trigger and Also a Way to Manage or Live With Your Grief.
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Wilson, Donna M., Knox, Michelle, Banamwana, Gilbert, Brown, Cary A., and Errasti-Ibarrondo, Begoña
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WIT & humor , *QUALITATIVE research , *DEATH , *INTERVIEWING , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *JUDGMENT sampling , *FAMILY relations , *BEREAVEMENT , *RESEARCH methodology , *GRIEF - Abstract
In 2020–2021, a qualitative study was undertaken using an interpretive description methodology to identify what triggers grief in the first 2 years following the death of a beloved family member, and to gain other helpful insights about grief triggers from bereaved Canadian adult volunteers. In that study, a purposive sampling method was used to select 10 bereaved Canadian adult volunteers for in-depth, semi-structured interviews. This paper reports on the humor findings, as revealed to be a particularly complex grief trigger for many participants, as well as a periodic way for most to manage or live with their grief. Participant quotes and an extended discussion are included to illustrate the importance of these humor findings in relation to grief, and to inform bereaved people, bereavement service providers, and the general public about both helpful aspects and some cautionary considerations about humor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. 'Then I Met This Lovely Police Woman' Young People's Experiences of Engagement with the Criminal Justice System.
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McElvaney, Rosaleen, Collin‐Vezina, Delphine, Alaggia, Ramona, and Simpson, Megan
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QUALITATIVE research , *VIOLENCE , *RESEARCH funding , *LEGAL liability , *INTERVIEWING , *CHILD sexual abuse , *EXPERIENCE , *THEMATIC analysis , *EMOTIONAL trauma , *RESEARCH methodology , *CRIMINAL justice system , *POLICE , *SOCIAL support , *SELF-disclosure - Abstract
Young people's voices detailing how they experienced engagement with the criminal justice system following child sexual abuse, what was helpful or unhelpful and how services can be improved to minimise secondary victimisation and maximise the potential for healing are largely absent from the research literature. This paper draws on semi‐structured interviews with a culturally diverse sample (n = 47) of young people aged 14 to 25 across Ireland and Canada about their experiences of disclosure and engagement with systems. Data were collected pertaining to experiences engaging with law enforcement personnel using thematic analysis with a trauma‐informed lens. The research identified three key themes: the importance of feeling safe through kindness, transparency and being believed; the importance of having a say; and the importance of timely court processes. The study builds on the small body of qualitative research illustrating young people's lived experiences of engaging with the criminal justice system and provides empirical support for promoting a trauma‐informed approach in how police engage with young people. Guidance is offered for police professionals on how to engage with adolescents following sexual abuse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. 'It's overwhelming at the start': transitioning to public transit use as an older adult.
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Ravensbergen, Léa, Newbold, K. Bruce, and Ganann, Rebecca
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ACTIVE aging , *CONFIDENCE , *TRAVEL , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *SELF-efficacy , *QUALITATIVE research , *ABILITY , *TRAINING , *ACCESSIBLE design of public spaces , *PHYSICAL mobility , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIAL attitudes , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIAL skills , *TRANSPORTATION , *OLD age - Abstract
Independent mobility is an important component of healthy ageing. Public transit may be an affordable way to achieve independent mobility, and yet little is known about older adults' transition to public transit. This paper addresses this research gap by providing an exploration of older adults' experiences transitioning to public transit use, and by comparing these experiences to those of older people who have always travelled using transit. Twenty-four older adults (65+) living in Hamilton, Canada, who use public transit completed semi-structured interviews during which they discussed their experiences when they first began to use transit. These experiences are framed herein with the concept self-efficacy, i.e. how one's belief in their ability to complete a task shapes their ability to complete said task. Results indicate that most older adults acquire skills to transition to public transit, such as trip planning, boarding, knowing where to sit and exiting the bus. These skills are developed through practice. As one gains experience, one becomes more confident in their ability to meet their daily travel needs using transit. Therefore, the transition to public transit as an older adult can be more challenging for those with little experience using public transit. This paper highlights the danger of assuming all older adults will effortlessly take up transit and stresses the importance of older adults gaining experience using public transit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Developing as a person: How international educational programs transform nurses and midwives.
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JOHNSTON, JACQUELINE, MCKENNA, PROFESSOR LISA, MALIK, GULZAR, and REISENHOFER, SONIA
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NURSING education , *NURSES , *COMMUNICATIVE competence , *MIDWIVES , *INTERNSHIP programs , *INTERVIEWING , *STATISTICAL sampling , *MIDWIFERY education , *JUDGMENT sampling , *CONFIDENCE , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *PSYCHIATRIC nurses , *PROFESSIONAL employee training , *EXCHANGE of persons programs , *SERVICE learning , *RESEARCH methodology , *INDIVIDUAL development , *GROUNDED theory - Abstract
Objective: To determine impact of undertaking an international educational program during a nurse's or midwife's pre-registration program on subsequent practice, focusing on how nurses and midwives were transformed personally through participation in such programs. Background: Participation in international educational programs has been reported to enhance nursing and midwifery students' personal and professional development, however long-term impacts remain unclear. This paper presents findings drawn from a larger grounded theory study. Study design and Methods: Charmaz's grounded theory methodology was used to elicit experiences from 13 general nurses, two mental health nurses, three midwives and four dual qualified nurse/midwives across eight different countries. Data analysis led to the creation of three categories, with this paper reporting on the category of Developing as a Person. Findings: Participation in international educational programs can be transformative for nurses and midwives with long-lasting impacts, contributing positively to their personal growth and development. Discussion: The study findings underscore significant long-term impacts of international educational programs for nurses and midwives. These outcomes highlight the importance of incorporating international experiences into healthcare education. Conclusion: By providing opportunities for healthcare professionals to engage with diverse settings and populations, organisations and educational institutions can foster the development of well-rounded and globally competent practitioners. Implications for research, policy, and practice: The study's findings hold significant implications for research, policy, and practice in healthcare education. To deepen our understandings, additional longitudinal research across diverse countries is warranted. Policymakers have an opportunity to acknowledge the positive impact of these programs on the personal growth and development of nurses and midwives, potentially leading to the integration of global competency requirements into licensure programs. In order to provide comprehensive education, educational institutions should consider the inclusion of study abroad opportunities, cultural exchanges, and global clinical placements within nursing and midwifery curricula. What is already known about the topic? • International educational programs are widely used as a way of developing nursing and midwifery students' cultural understandings. • Previous studies have reported on short-term impacts of international educational programs. What this paper adds: • Long-term impacts of participation in an international educational program on nurses and midwives are described. • Personal development and subsequent transformations occur for nurses and midwives as a result of participation in international educational programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Tracking activity-based therapy for people living with spinal cord injury or disease: insights gained through focus group interviews with key stakeholders.
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Kaiser, Anita, Sessford, James, Chan, Katherine, Martin, Samantha, McCullum, Shane, Athanasopoulos, Peter, Rice, Chris, Leo, Jennifer, Forrester, Scott, MacRitchie, Iona, Zariffa, José, and Musselman, Kristin E.
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PHYSICAL therapy , *FOCUS groups , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *INTERVIEWING , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *CONTENT analysis , *SPINAL cord injuries , *DECISION making , *THEMATIC analysis , *RESEARCH methodology , *QUALITY of life , *RESEARCH , *STAKEHOLDER analysis , *PHYSICAL activity , *WELL-being - Abstract
The development of a tool to track participation in activity-based therapy (ABT) for people with spinal cord injury or disease (SCI/D) was identified as a priority of the Canadian ABT Community of Practice. The objective of this study was to understand multi-stakeholder perspectives on tracking ABT participation across the continuum of care. Forty-eight individuals from six stakeholder groups (persons living with SCI/D; hospital therapists; community trainers; administrators; researchers; and funders, advocates and policy experts) were recruited to participate in focus group interviews. Participants were asked open-ended questions concerning the importance of and parameters around tracking ABT. Transcripts were analyzed using conventional content analysis. Themes reflected the Who, What, Where, When, Why and How of tracking ABT. Participants described the importance of involving hospital therapists, community trainers and individuals with SCI/D in tracking ABT to capture both subjective and objective parameters across the continuum of care and injury trajectory. Digital tracking tools were favoured, although paper-based versions were regarded as a necessity in some circumstances. Findings highlighted the importance of tracking ABT participation for individuals with SCI/D. The information may guide the development of ABT practice guidelines and support the implementation of ABT in Canada. Tracking the details of activity-based therapy (ABT) sessions and programs across the continuum of care and injury trajectory may provide important information to support the development of ABT practice guidelines and implementation strategies. Tracking objective and subjective parameters are needed to provide a comprehensive description of an ABT session and program. Clinicians and individuals with spinal cord injury or disease (SCI/D) should both be able to track ABT to accommodate all settings and types of data. Digital tracking tools, such as an app, may provide an accessible, versatile and efficient way of tracking ABT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Lived Experience of the Dyad and Their Relationships Following a Fetal Death: A Hermeneutic Phenomenological Study.
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McDonough, Mary Rose and Leone-Sheehan, Danielle
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MEMORY , *GRIEF , *SOCIAL support , *RESEARCH methodology , *SOCIAL media , *MEDICAL personnel , *INTERVIEWING , *PERINATAL death , *SPOUSES , *PATIENTS' families , *EXPERIENCE , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *QUALITATIVE research , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOUND recordings - Abstract
Little is known about the lived experience of the dyad following a fetal death and the impact on relationships. The purpose of this paper is to explore the dyadic relationship between partners, with health care providers, and with the baby's memory after birth. This qualitative study utilized hermeneutic phenomenology. The sample included 10 heterosexual dyads from the United States and Canada. All experienced a fetal death between 6 months and 7 years prior to their interviews. The data revealed three themes: (a) The Dyad Relationship: Moving Through the Experience Together; (b) Keeping the Memory Alive: Memorializing the Baby; and (c) Relationships With Health Care Providers: A Spectrum of Caring. The findings from this study provide the beginning knowledge needed to improve the care of dyads who have experienced a fetal death and for future studies to improve care delivery for dyads as their relationships change after fetal death. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Evaluation of the Special Olympics Canada Coaching Young Athletes Training: Part B How's it Going? A Study of Active Start and FUNdamentals Program Implementation.
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Temple, Viviene A. and Field, Stephanie C.
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SPORTS participation , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *SPORTS for people with disabilities , *RESEARCH methodology , *CHILD development , *PHYSICAL training & conditioning , *MENTORING , *INTERVIEWING , *ATHLETES , *SPORTS , *PUBLIC health , *QUALITATIVE research , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *SPORTS events , *ATHLETIC ability , *INTELLECTUAL disabilities , *PHYSICAL education , *ADULT education workshops , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Training staff and volunteers is an important aspect of successful program implementation. This paper follows Part A of an evaluation of the Special Olympics Canada (SOC) Coaching Young Athletes Training course. Consistent with Kirkpatrick's four-level model of training evaluation, Part A evaluated program leaders' reactions to (level 1) and immediate learning from (level 2) the training. This Part B paper covers "on the job" behavior (level 3). In-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted with youth program leaders (n = 11) from eight provinces. Overall, participants felt that more training related to working with children with autism and promoting positive athlete behavior was needed. The findings also lead us to suggest that program leaders need to develop a more fulsome understanding of how to foster skill mastery, including how to practice the same skill in many and varied ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
10. Enhancing critical social work practice: Using text-based vignettes in qualitative research.
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Kia, Hannah
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PROFESSIONAL practice , *HIV infections , *FOCUS groups , *GROUNDED theory , *RESEARCH methodology , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CHANGE , *TRANSPHOBIA , *GENDER-nonconforming people , *INTERVIEWING , *SOCIAL stigma , *EXPERIENCE , *QUALITATIVE research , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *ORGANIZATIONAL change , *SOCIAL worker attitudes , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *RESEARCH funding , *CASE studies , *CHILD welfare , *SOCIAL services , *TRANSGENDER people , *SECONDARY analysis , *CISGENDER people - Abstract
There exist ongoing calls among social work scholars and practitioners to cultivate applied knowledge of critical and emancipatory practice. In this paper, I explore the utility of text-based vignettes as instruments that can be used to elicit insight from marginalized service users on critical social work practice. To do this work, I draw on data from interviews with 20 transgender and gender diverse (TGD) social service users, along with 10 social workers, whose responses to a text-based vignette were originally used to build an understanding of the constituents of equitable social work practice with TGD people. Incorporating critical pragmatism as a conceptual framework and constructivist grounded theory as a methodological orientation, I analyze data from this study as an exemplar that substantiates the promise of using text-based vignettes in qualitative social work research to generate knowledge of critical social work practice. Specifically, I demonstrate how text-based vignettes in this study (1) contextualized the meaning, significance, and impact of oppression for service users, (2) built insight on practice that reflects solidarity and allyship, and (3) identified opportunities for social workers' reflexive use of professional power to effect change. Accounting for the tensions between empiricism and critical praxis in social work, I consider the promise of incorporating text-based vignettes to develop empirical social work literature that is rooted in the voices of marginalized service users. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Implications of time and space factors related with youth substance use prevention: a conceptual review and case study of the Icelandic Prevention Model being implemented in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Halsall, Tanya, Mahmoud, Kianna, Iyer, Srividya N., Orpana, Heather, Zeni, Megan, and Matheson, Kimberly
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SUBSTANCE abuse prevention , *RISK-taking behavior , *LEISURE , *COVID-19 , *HEALTH services accessibility , *TIME , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care , *COMMUNITIES , *INTERVIEWING , *FAMILIES , *TRANSPORTATION of patients , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *SOCIAL cohesion , *QUALITATIVE research , *RESEARCH funding , *HEALTH , *CASE studies , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis software , *SUPERVISION of employees , *SPACE perception , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Purpose: This research examines the implementation of the Icelandic Prevention Model (IPM) in Canada to identify opportunities revealed by the COVID-19 pandemic to re-design our social eco-system to promote wellbeing. This paper has two objectives: 1) to provide a conceptual review of research that applies the bioecological model to youth substance use prevention with a focus on the concepts of time and physical space use and 2) to describe a case study that examines the implementation of the IPM in Canada within the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Method: Study data were collected through semistructured qualitative interviews with key stakeholders involved in implementing the IPM. Results: Findings are organized within three over-arching themes derived from a thematic analysis: 1) Issues that influence time and space use patterns and youth substance use, 2) Family and community cohesion and influences on developmental context and time use and 3) Opportunities presented by the pandemic that can promote youth wellbeing. Conclusion: We apply the findings to research on the IPM as well as the pandemic to examine opportunities that may support primary prevention and overall youth wellbeing. We use the concepts of time and space as a foundation to discuss implications for policy and practice going forward. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Mental Health of Canadian Military-Connected Children: A Qualitative Study Exploring the Perspectives of Service Providers.
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Hill, Shannon, Williams, Ashley, Khalid-Khan, Sarosh, Reddy, Pappu, Groll, Dianne, Rühland, Lucia, and Cramm, Heidi
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LIFESTYLES , *HEALTH services accessibility , *MILITARY medicine , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *PHYSICIAN-patient relations , *RESEARCH methodology , *MENTAL health , *INTERVIEWING , *FAMILIES of military personnel , *QUALITATIVE research , *RESEARCH funding , *PARENT-child relationships , *CONTENT analysis , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *MENTAL health services - Abstract
The military lifestyle can be defined by a triad of unique stressors: frequent relocation, parental absence, and risk of injury, illness and/or death of a serving member. Research has suggested that this unique triad of stressors can impact the mental health of children and youth living in military families. However, research focusing on the mental health of children and youth living in military families overwhelmingly focuses on the American context. Due to key contextual differences, it is unclear to what extent the American findings are representative of military-connected children and youth living in other geographical contexts, such as Canada. A large qualitative study was conducted to explore the mental health of military-connected children in Canada from three perspectives: child, parent, and service provider. This paper reports on the service provider findings. Using individual semi-structured interviews, data were collected from 11 service providers. Data analysis was guided by qualitative content analysis. Two main themes emerged: (1) the mental health of children living in military families may be impacted by the military lifestyle stressors, and (2) the mental health of children living in military families can be impacted by the accessibility and availability of mental health services. While this qualitative study builds upon recent Canadian work that has considered the service provider perspective, additional research is needed to better understand the experiences of service providers who support military-connected children and youth. Highlights: American research shows that the military lifestyle factors can impact the mental health of military-connected children. The mental health of military-connected children has yet to be extensively explored in Canada. The mental health of children living in Canadian military families may be impacted by the military lifestyle stressors. The mental health of Canadian military-connected children can be impacted by the accessibility and availability of mental health services. Our findings can help build capacity and knowledge for service providers who support Canadian military-connected children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Exploring the links between slang and sexual and gender-based violence among university students in a Canadian city.
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Orchard, Treena and Sangaraganesan, Doreen Mathura
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CULTURE , *MASCULINITY , *SCHOOL environment , *RACISM , *PSYCHOLOGY of college students , *RESEARCH methodology , *VIOLENCE , *LANGUAGE & languages , *INTERVIEWING , *GENDER , *ATTITUDES toward sex , *SEX crimes , *TERMS & phrases , *LGBTQ+ people , *RESEARCH funding , *JUDGMENT sampling , *THEMATIC analysis , *STUDENT attitudes , *SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
Despite decades of research and education, sexual and gender-based violence remain distressingly prevalent on university and college campuses globally. The taboos associated with sex, gender inequity, and living in a patriarchal world where misogyny is glorified and criminalised are key socio-cultural determinants driving these forms of violence. Less is known about the ways in which sexual slang or terminology impact how students experience and talk about these events. This paper reports on findings from a participatory action study that explored sexual slang use among female and male undergraduate students (n = 23) with the aim of creating more responsive sexual and gender-based violence policies and practices. The terms identified (n = 59) provide a window into the daily lives of these young people, who display remarkable socio-linguistic adaptation and creativity. They also demonstrate how cultural appropriation, the exclusion of queer students, toxic masculinitycontribute to ongoing incidents of sexual and gender-based violence on campus. These findings contribute new insights into sexual terminology among post-secondary students, particularly in the Canadian context where few studies of this nature exist. They also acknowledge the critical role universities can play in making meaningful structural change to prevent traumatic events from occurring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. Health equity related challenges and experiences during the rapid implementation of virtual care during COVID-19: a multiple case study.
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Shahid, Simone, Hogeveen, Sophie, Sky, Philina, Chandra, Shivani, Budhwani, Suman, de Silva, Ryan, Bhatia, R. Sacha, Seto, Emily, and Shaw, James
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HEALTH services accessibility , *HEALTH literacy , *HUMAN services programs , *QUALITATIVE research , *RESEARCH funding , *PRIMARY health care , *MEDICAL care , *DIGITAL health , *INTERVIEWING , *TELEMEDICINE , *THEMATIC analysis , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *HEALTH equity , *CASE studies , *COVID-19 pandemic , *COMMUNITY-based social services , *PATIENT participation - Abstract
Background: Virtual care quickly became of crucial importance to health systems around the world during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite the potential of virtual care to enhance access for some communities, the scale and pace at which services were virtualized did not leave many organizations with sufficient time and resources to ensure optimal and equitable delivery of care for everyone. The objective of this paper is to outline the experiences of health care organizations rapidly implementing virtual care during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic and examine whether and how health equity was considered. Methods: We used an exploratory, multiple case study approach involving four health and social service organizations providing virtual care services to structurally marginalized communities in the province of Ontario, Canada. We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with providers, managers, and patients to understand the challenges experienced by organizations and the strategies put in place to support health equity during the rapid virtualization of care. Thirty-eight interviews were thematically analyzed using rapid analytic techniques. Results: Organizations experienced challenges related to infrastructure availability, digital health literacy, culturally appropriate approaches, capacity for health equity, and virtual care suitability. Strategies to support health equity included the provision of blended models of care, creation of volunteer and staff support teams, participation in community engagement and outreach, and securement of infrastructure for clients. We put our findings into the context of an existing framework conceptualizing access to health care and expand on what this means for equitable access to virtual care for structurally marginalized communities. Conclusion: This paper highlights the need to pay greater attention to the role of health equity in virtual care delivery and situate that conversation around existing inequitable structures in the health care system that are perpetuated when delivering care virtually. An equitable and sustainable approach to virtual care delivery will require applying an intersectionality lens on the strategies and solutions needed to address existing inequities in the system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Decolonial, intersectional pedagogies in Canadian Nursing and Medical Education.
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Bhandal, Taqdir K., Browne, Annette J., Ahenakew, Cash, and Reimer‐Kirkham, Sheryl
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DIVERSITY & inclusion policies , *TEACHER-student relationships , *SCHOOL environment , *TEACHING methods , *SPIRITUALITY , *RESEARCH methodology , *CURRICULUM , *SOCIAL justice , *INTERVIEWING , *NURSING education , *EXPERIENCE , *ETHNOLOGY research , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *INTERSECTIONALITY , *STUDENTS , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *PARTICIPANT observation , *JUDGMENT sampling , *EMOTIONS , *MEDICAL education , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes - 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. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Doing primary care integration: a qualitative study of meso-level collaborative practices.
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Leslie, Myles, Fadaak, Raad, and Pinto, Nicole
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GENETIC mutation , *COVID-19 , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *PRIMARY health care , *QUALITATIVE research , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *MEDICAL practice , *INTEGRATED health care delivery , *STATISTICAL sampling - Abstract
Background: The integration of Primary Care (PC) into broader health systems has been a goal in jurisdictions around the world. Efforts to achieve integration at the meso-level have drawn particular attention, but there are few actionable recommendations for how to enact a 'pro-integration culture' amongst government and PC governance bodies. This paper describes pragmatic integration activity undertaken by meso-level participants in Alberta, Canada, and suggests ways this activity may be generalizable to other health systems. Methods: 11 semi-structured interviews with nine key informants from meso-level organizations were selected from a larger qualitative study examining healthcare policy development and implementation during the COVID-19 pandemic. Selected interviews focused on participants' experiences and efforts to 'do' integration as they responded to Alberta's first wave of the Omicron variant in September 2021. An interpretive descriptive approach was used to identify repeating cycles in the integration context, and pragmatic integration activities. Results: As Omicron arrived in Alberta, integration and relations between meso-level PC and central health system participants were tense, but efforts to improve the situation were successfully made. In this context of cycling relationships, staffing changes made in reaction to exogenous shocks and political pressures were clear influences on integration. However, participants also engaged in specific behaviours that advanced a pro-integration culture. They did so by: signaling value through staffing and resource choices; speaking and enacting personal and group commitments to collaboration; persevering; and practicing bi-directional communication through formal and informal channels. Conclusions: Achieving PC integration involves not just the reactive work of responding to exogenous factors, but also the proactive work of enacting cultural, relationship, and communication behaviors. These behaviors may support integration regardless of the shocks, staff turnover, and relational freeze-thaw cycles experienced by any health system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Understanding how Canadian healthcare providers have learned to identify co‐occurring PTSD symptoms and dementia in Veterans.
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Ritchie, Kim, Cramm, Heidi, Aiken, Alice, Donnelly, Catherine, and Goldie, Catherine
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DIAGNOSIS of post-traumatic stress disorder , *DIAGNOSIS of dementia , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *AGITATION (Psychology) , *LEARNING strategies , *QUALITATIVE research , *HEALTH , *INFORMATION resources , *VETERANS , *JUDGMENT sampling , *THEMATIC analysis , *ANGER , *PATIENT care , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
Accessible Summary: What is known on the subject?: Little is known about how PTSD and dementia in Veterans is identified by health care providers. What the paper adds to existing knowledge?: Healthcare providers identify those behavioural symptoms experienced by older people living with dementia that represent an unmet need associated with PTSD secondary to military service. Once healthcare providers recognize the presence of symptoms relevant to PTSD, they modify their care approach to include focused/tailored non‐pharmacological care interventions that address environmental and situational variables that reflect military action. What are the implications for practice?: Specialized education and training is needed to improve the identification of PTSD when existent with other co‐occurring neurocognitive conditions such as delirium, dementia and depression. Introduction: Co‐occurring PTSD and dementia in Veterans can be difficult to distinguish from dementia‐related responsive behaviours, which may result in inappropriate care management. Improved identification of PTSD and dementia is necessary to inform more appropriate and effective care for Veterans. Aim/Question: The purpose of this study was to understand how Canadian healthcare providers have learned to identify the co‐occurrence of PTSD symptoms in Veterans with dementia. Methods: Eight semi‐structured interviews employing the Critical Incident Technique were conducted with key informant healthcare providers who treat Veterans from across Canada. Framework analysis was used to code, sort and develop themes. Results: Observed differences in Veterans with PTSD and dementia cued healthcare providers to seek our more information, leading to a new understanding of past trauma underlying the symptoms they observed. Healthcare providers then altered their usual care approaches to utilize trust‐based and validation‐oriented strategies resulting in more effective care management. Discussion: Improvement in the identification of co‐occurring PTSD and dementia in Veterans requires specialized education and training for healthcare providers. Implications for Practice: Recognizing the complex needs of older Veterans with co‐occurring PTSD and dementia is necessary for healthcare providers to implement more effective care for this population. Relevance Statement: This paper provides mental health nurses with new understanding of co‐occurring PTSD and dementia in Veterans. With an ageing Veteran population in Canada, mental health nurses need to be knowledgeable about the care for Veteran specific mental health needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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18. 'To me, it's ones and zeros, but in reality that one is death': A qualitative study exploring researchers' experience of involving and engaging seldom‐heard communities in big data research.
- Author
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Teodorowski, Piotr, Rodgers, Sarah E., Fleming, Kate, Tahir, Naheed, Ahmed, Saiqa, and Frith, Lucy
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EXPERIMENTAL design , *PATIENT participation , *RESEARCH methodology , *SOCIAL media , *SOCIAL constructionism , *COMMUNITIES , *INTERVIEWING , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOUND recordings , *RESEARCH funding , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SOFTWARE analytics , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis software , *PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
Background: Big data research requires public support. It has been argued that this can be achieved by public involvement and engagement to ensure that public views are at the centre of research projects. Researchers should aim to include diverse communities, including seldom‐heard voices, to ensure that a range of voices are heard and that research is meaningful to them. Objective: We explored how researchers involve and engage seldom‐heard communities around big data research. Methods: This is a qualitative study. Researchers who had experience of involving or engaging seldom‐heard communities in big data research were recruited. They were based in England (n = 5), Scotland (n = 4), Belgium (n = 2) and Canada (n = 1). Twelve semistructured interviews were conducted on Zoom. All interviews were audio‐recorded and transcribed, and we used reflexive thematic analysis to analyse participants' experiences. Results: The analysis highlighted the complexity of involving and engaging seldom‐heard communities around big data research. Four themes were developed to represent participants' experiences: (1) abstraction and complexity of big data, (2) one size does not fit all, (3) working in partnership and (4) empowering the public contribution. Conclusion: The study offers researchers a better understanding of how to involve and engage seldom‐heard communities in a meaningful way around big data research. There is no one right approach, with involvement and engagement activities required to be project‐specific and dependent on the public contributors, researchers' needs, resources and time available. Patient and Public Involvement: Two public contributors are authors of the paper and they were involved in the study design, analysis and writing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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19. Who's Going to Keep Us Safe? Surviving Domestic Violence and Shared Parenting During Covid-19.
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Archer-Kuhn, Beth, Hughes, Judith, Saini, Michael, Still, Marni, Beltrano, Natalie, and Tam, Dora
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SAFETY , *ATTITUDES of mothers , *CO-parents , *RESEARCH methodology , *DOMESTIC violence , *INTERVIEWING , *SOCIAL isolation , *RESEARCH funding , *THEMATIC analysis , *COVID-19 pandemic , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *DIVORCE , *CONTROL (Psychology) - Abstract
This paper discusses the experiences during COVID-19 of mothers who have young children, are survivors of domestic violence and who share parenting to highlight the further unsafe situations survivors of violence and their children were placed in during the pandemic. Part of a larger mixed methods study, these participants (n = 19) from three Canadian provinces, Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario, engaged in virtual individual one-on-one interviews via zoom. Using thematic analysis, four themes emerged from the data: 1) increased use of coercive controlling behaviors; 2) fear of the unknown; 3) lack of supports; and, 4) finding balance. Direct quotes are used to highlight the meaning of each theme. We outline the challenges these women have that are in addition to those experienced by many during COVID-19 times (increased stress, isolation, disconnect from supports, financial challenges). These include managing the shared parenting arrangements with a former abusive partner who used the pandemic as a further opportunity for coercive controlling behaviors under the guise of the public health order. The mothers were left to manage the difficult exchanges with a former abusive partner and unknown circumstances of the pandemic without guidance and support from legal actors. There will need to be a prioritization of the safety of mothers and their children in post-divorce parenting arrangements both during times of a community lockdown such as during the pandemic and also during non-pandemic times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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20. "Food engages people, as we know": health care and service providers' experiences of using food as an incentive in HIV care and support in British Columbia, Canada.
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Gagnon, Marilou, Payne, Alayna, Guta, Adrian, and Bungay, Vicky
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HIV-positive persons , *HEALTH services accessibility , *SOCIAL support , *FOOD security , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *RESEARCH methodology , *FOOD consumption , *INTERVIEWING , *MEDICAL screening , *QUALITATIVE research , *CASE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Food insecurity is widely documented among people living with HIV (PLWH) worldwide, and it presents significant challenges across the spectrum of HIV care and support. In North America, the prevalence of food insecurity among PLWH exceeds 50%. In the province of British Columbia (BC), it exceeds 65%. It comes as no surprise that food has become an essential tool in supporting and engaging with PLWH. Over the past decade, however, a shift has taken place, and food has become an incentive to boost uptake and outcomes of prevention, testing, treatment, and support. To explore this practice, we drew on a qualitative case study of incentives in the care and support of PLWH. This paper presents the findings of a targeted analysis of interviews (N = 25) that discuss food incentives and explores two main themes that shed light on this practice: (1) Using food to engage versus to incentivize and (2) Food is more beneficial and more ethical. Providers perceived food more positively than other incentives, despite the goal remaining somewhat the same. Incentives, such as cash or gift cards, were considered ethically problematic and less helpful (and potentially harmful), whereas food addressed a basic need and felt more ethical. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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21. Implementation of strengths model case management in seven mental health agencies in Canada: Direct‐service practitioners' implementation experience.
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Briand, Catherine, Roebuck, Maryann, Vallée, Catherine, Bergeron‐Leclerc, Christiane, Krupa, Terry, Durbin, Janet, Aubry, Tim, Goscha, Rick, and Latimer, Eric
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- *
RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *HUMAN services programs , *QUALITATIVE research , *SUPERVISION of employees , *MENTAL health services , *PSYCHIATRIC hospitals - Abstract
Rationale: Implementation of strengths model case management is increasing internationally. However, few studies have focused on its implementation process, and none have specifically addressed the implementation experience of direct‐service practitioners. Objective: This paper presents factors that facilitate and impede the successful implementation of the strengths model, with a specific focus on practitioners who deliver the intervention directly to service recipients. Method: To address this objective, a qualitative study of seven mental health agencies that implemented the model was conducted, involving a combination of participant observations and qualitative semistructured interviews with case managers, team supervisors, and senior managers. Qualitative data were analyzed using open coding followed by axial coding. Finally, the findings were aligned with an adapted Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research. Results: Implementation of the strengths model involved a significant change in practice for case management practitioners. The results confirm that at the beginning of implementation, the strengths model was perceived as complex and not always adaptable to on‐the‐ground realities. With time, and with support from management, ongoing training and supervision sessions, and reflection and discussion, practitioners regained feelings of competence and resistance to the model diminished. The use of the model's structured team‐based supervision tools was fundamental to supporting the implementation process by enabling an interactive and concrete training approach. Conclusions: The more an approach leads to changes in daily practice and is perceived as complex, the more concrete support is needed during implementation. This article highlights the importance of attending to a practitioner's sense of personal effectiveness and competence in the adoption of new practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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22. "If You Can Just Break the Stigma Around It": LGBTQI+ Migrants' Experiences of Stigma and Mental Health.
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Haghiri-Vijeh, Roya and Clark, Nancy
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SAFETY , *CULTURE , *IMMIGRANTS , *HEALTH services accessibility , *PSYCHOLOGY of LGBTQ+ people , *RESEARCH methodology , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *MENTAL health , *SOCIAL stigma , *INTERVIEWING , *FEAR , *QUALITATIVE research , *MENTAL illness - Abstract
Migrants, that is people who experience forced displacement or move based on being lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, two-spirit, queer, and intersex (LGBTQI+), experience increased trauma and stigma when compared to heterosexual and cisgender people. The aim of this paper is to highlight LGBTQI+ migrants' experiences of health and social care encounters in Canada. Gadamerian hermeneutics and an intersectionality lens was used to understand LGBTQI+ migrants' experiences. A total of 16 semi-structured individual interviews were conducted with LGBTQI+ migrants. Themes of stigma and discrimination were identified as (1) "I never went back": Stigma as an exclusionary experience, (2) "Is [your country of birth] really that bad": Fear, safety, and cultural stigma, and (3) "The circle ... is not going to fix my life": LGBTQI+ migrants' call for affirming care. Results suggest that health and social care practices are stigmatizing and discriminatory which negatively impacts LGBTQI+ migrant mental health. Salient practices for promoting mental health included affirming LGBTQI+ identities and orientations through health and social care practices that are culturally safe as well as trauma and violence informed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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23. 'It's not just to treat everybody the same': A social justice framework for caring for larger patients in healthcare practice.
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Kanagasingam, Deana, Norman, Moss, and Hurd, Laura
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OBESITY , *BODY weight , *HEALTH services accessibility , *RESEARCH methodology , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *SOCIAL justice , *PREJUDICES , *INTERVIEWING , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *INTERSECTIONALITY , *PATIENT care , *MEDICAL practice , *HEALTH equity , *PATIENT-professional relations , *THEMATIC analysis , *ATTITUDES toward obesity , *CONSCIOUSNESS - Abstract
Drawing on semi‐structured interviews with larger bodied patients (n = 20) and their healthcare practitioners (n = 22) in Canada, this paper combines micro and macro approaches in outlining a social justice approach to caring for larger patients in healthcare practice. Theoretically, we draw upon structural competency and critical consciousness to address the question of how social justice is enacted, experienced, and understood in interactions between clinicians and larger patients. Our findings highlight four key themes that provide a framework for integrating social justice into healthcare practice: (1) an awareness of one's simultaneous experience of marginalisation and privilege in the clinical interaction; (2) navigating between additive and interactive understandings of intersectionality; (3) micro and macro approaches to change; and (4) straddling the line between equity and equality. The synergies in participants' perspectives across social identities suggests that the cultivation of social justice awareness potentially mitigates some blinders of privilege. Furthermore, practitioners' social justice orientation positively impacted patient experience, with most patients expressing appreciation for having their various histories of trauma and social challenges handled compassionately during appointments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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24. The therapeutic relationship in the context of involuntary treatment orders: The perspective of nurses and patients.
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Lessard‐Deschênes, Clara and Goulet, Marie‐Hélène
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MENTAL illness treatment , *THERAPEUTICS , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *NURSES' attitudes , *STAKEHOLDER analysis , *RESEARCH methodology , *TIME , *INTERVIEWING , *NURSE-patient relationships , *INVOLUNTARY hospitalization , *MEDICAL protocols , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *QUALITATIVE research , *CONFLICT management , *NURSES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CONTENT analysis , *LEGAL procedure , *STATISTICAL sampling , *THEMATIC analysis , *RISK management in business , *THERAPEUTIC alliance , *SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
Accessible Summary: What is known on the subject?: Involuntary treatment orders are increasingly being used around the world to allow the treatment of individuals living with a mental illness deemed incapable of giving consent and who are actively refusing treatment.The use of involuntary treatment orders can impact the nurse–patient therapeutic relationship, which is essential to offer quality care and promote recovery. What the paper adds to existing knowledge?: Nurses and patients do not agree on the possibility to develop a therapeutic relationship, with nurses believing they can build a bond with the patients despite the challenges imposed by the involuntary treatment order, and patients rejecting this possibility.Nurses caring for patients on involuntary treatment orders feel obligated to apply the conditions of this measure, even if it damages the relationship with their patients. This difficult aspect of their work leads them to question their role in relation to the management of involuntary treatment orders. What are the implications for practice?: Nurses need to be aware of the reasons why patients on involuntary treatment orders do not believe in the possibility of building a therapeutic relationship.Nurses need to reflect on and express their concerns about the damaging effects that managing involuntary treatment orders conditions can have on the nurse–patient therapeutic relationship. Introduction: Involuntary treatment orders (ITO) can impact the nurse–patient therapeutic relationship (TR) negatively. Despite the increasing use of ITOs around the world, few studies have explored their influence on the TR from the perspectives of nurses and patients. Aim: To describe the TR in the context of ITOs as reported by nurses and individuals living with a mental illness. Method: Secondary data analysis of qualitative interviews with nurses (n = 9) and patients (n = 6) was performed using content analysis. Results: Participants described the TR as fundamentally embedded in a power imbalance amplified by the ITO, which was discussed through the conflicting roles of nurses, the legal constraints imposed on patients and nurses, the complex relation between the ITO and the TR, and the influence of mental healthcare settings' context. Discussion: Nurses and patients' views were opposed, questioning the authenticity of the relationship. Implications for Practice: Nurses should be aware of the patients' lack of faith in the TR to ensure that they are sensitive to patients' behaviours that may falsely suggest that a relationship is established. Further studies should explore ways to alleviate the burden of the management of ITOs on nurses and allow for a trusting relationship to be build. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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25. What's suffering got to do with it? A qualitative study of suffering in the context of Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID).
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Pesut, Barbara, Wright, David Kenneth, Thorne, Sally, Hall, Margaret I., Puurveen, Gloria, Storch, Janet, and Huggins, Madison
- Subjects
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TERMINAL care , *NURSES' attitudes , *ASSISTED suicide , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *QUALITATIVE research , *DECISION making , *THEMATIC analysis , *PALLIATIVE treatment - Abstract
Background: Intolerable suffering is a common eligibility requirement for persons requesting assisted death, and although suffering has received philosophic attention for millennia, only recently has it been the focus of empirical inquiry. Robust theoretical knowledge about suffering is critically important as modern healthcare provides persons with different options at end-of-life to relieve suffering. The purpose of this paper is to present findings specific to the understanding and application of suffering in the context of MAID from nurses' perspectives. Methods: A longitudinal qualitative descriptive study using semi-structured telephone interviews. Inductive analysis was used to construct a thematic account. The study received ethical approval and all participants provided written consent. Results: Fifty nurses and nurse practitioners from across Canada were interviewed. Participants described the suffering of dying and provided insights into the difficulties of treating existential suffering and the iatrogenic suffering patients experienced from long contact with the healthcare system. They shared perceptions of the suffering that leads to a request for MAID that included the unknown of dying, a desire for predictability, and the loss of dignity. Eliciting the suffering story was an essential part of nursing practice. Knowledge of the story allowed participants to find the balance between believing that suffering is whatever the persons says it is, while making sure that the MAID procedure was for the right person, for the right reason, at the right time. Participants perceived that the MAID process itself caused suffering that resulted from the complexity of decision-making, the chances of being deemed ineligible, and the heighted work of the tasks of dying. Conclusions: Healthcare providers involved in MAID must be critically reflective about the suffering histories they bring to the clinical encounter, particularly iatrogenic suffering. Further, eliciting the suffering stories of persons requesting MAID requires a high degree of skill; those involved in the assessment process must have the time and competency to do this important role well. The nature of suffering that patients and family encounter as they enter the contemplation, assessment, and provision of MAID requires further research to understand it better and develop best practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Students and instructors perspective on blended synchronous learning in a Canadian graduate program.
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Lakhal, Sawsen, Mukamurera, Joséphine, Bédard, Marie‐Eve, Heilporn, Géraldine, and Chauret, Mélodie
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ONLINE education , *SCHOOL environment , *TEACHING methods , *VIRTUAL reality , *RESEARCH methodology , *COLLEGE teacher attitudes , *VIDEOCONFERENCING , *INTERVIEWING , *CURRICULUM , *LEARNING strategies , *EXPERIENCE , *QUALITATIVE research , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *GRADUATE education , *STUDENTS , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *ACCESS to information , *RESEARCH funding , *STUDENT attitudes , *TECHNOLOGY , *CORPORATE culture - Abstract
Blended synchronous learning (BSL) represents several contexts that enable to bring remote students into the classroom, in real time, by the means of videoconferencing, web conferencing and virtual world. As BSL seems to be more and more implemented in many higher education institutions, especially in the current context of the COVID‐19 pandemic, and given the recent interest and scarce published research in BSL, more studies are needed on this kind of learning. The purpose of this research was to explore students and instructors perspective regarding their experience in BSL, according to three dimensions: pedagogy, technology and organization/logistics. To meet the study objective, a qualitative methodology was adopted. The study participants were remote students (n = 4) and face‐to‐face students (n = 4) enrolled in a graduate program in education offering only blended synchronous courses, and instructors (n = 5) in this program. Semi‐structured interviews were selected as the data collection method. Nine sub‐themes in reference to the three dimensions emerged from the study participants. They have also highlighted some challenges associated with BSL. The results reported in this study should provide faculties and higher education administrators with additional information and guidance, based on empirical data, on the use of BSL if they wish to implement it in academic programs. Moreover, in regard to the challenges revealed by the study participants, the results will permit to surpass the obstacles when implementing BSL successfully. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: Blended synchronous Learning (BSL) is more and more used in higher education.BSL may be a good alternative for higher education institutions in the context of the COVID‐19 pandemic, as it permits to reduce the number of involved students in face‐to‐face activities, by offloading some students to online from their home or a remote site.Despite its gain in popularity, little research has been performed on BSL and this research is somewhat sparse.Further research and recommendations are needed for faculties and higher education administrators to assist them in ascertaining what works and what does not in BSL. What this paper adds: The purpose of this study was to report on students and instructors experience on BSL, with remote students participating from multiple sites and face‐to‐face students from a single site.Students and instructors perspectives were explored using three dimensions: pedagogy, technology and organisation/logistics.Challenges associated with BSL were highlighted by the study participants Implications for practice and/or policy: The results of this study will guide faculties in designing and implementing BSL for their students.The challenges highlighted in the study results should be taken into account when implementing BSL. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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27. Bodies in yoga: tangled discourses in Canadian studios.
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Campeau-Bouthillier, Cassandre
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YOGA , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *HEALTH status indicators , *ETHNOLOGY research , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *THEMATIC analysis , *BODY image - Abstract
This paper presents the preliminary results of a one and a half-year ethnographic study conducted in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. The research focused on participants' experiences of their bodies in the context of yoga as a health practice—specifically how they conceptualised their musculoskeletal bodies in this practice through ideas of systems, fragments, and materiality. It argues that participants' larger narratives about health and healthy bodies inform how yoga as a health practice is embedded in discourses of body work where yoga, health, and particular notions of bodily-ness become a project for the transformation of the self into a particular idea of what a body is or should be. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Admissions experiences of aspiring physicians from low‐income backgrounds.
- Author
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De Freitas, Chanté, Buckley, Rya, Klimo, Rebecca, Daniel, Juliet M., Mountjoy, Margo, and Vanstone, Meredith
- Subjects
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SCHOOL admission , *PSYCHOLOGY of medical students , *CONFIDENCE , *VOCATIONAL guidance , *RESEARCH methodology , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *INTERVIEWING , *GROUP identity , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *INCOME , *QUALITATIVE research , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *MEDICAL schools , *STUDENT attitudes , *INFORMATION-seeking behavior - Abstract
Introduction: Students from low‐income backgrounds (LIB) have been under‐represented in Canadian medical schools for over fifty years. Despite our awareness of this problem, little is known about the experiences of aspiring physicians from LIB in Canada who are working towards medical school admission. Consequently, we have little insight into the barriers and facilitators that may be used to increase the representation of students from LIB in Canadian medical schools. Methods: This paper describes a qualitative description interview study aimed at understanding the experiences of aspiring physicians from LIB as they attempt to gain entry to medical school. We conducted semi‐structured interviews with 21 participants at different stages of their undergraduate, master's, and non‐medical professional education, and used the theories of intersectionality and identity capital as a theoretical framework for identifying barriers and facilitators to a career in medicine. Results: Participants experienced social, identity‐related, economic, structural and informational barriers to a career in medicine. Intrinsic facilitators included motivation, self‐confidence, attitude, strategy, information‐seeking and sorting, and financial literacy and increasing income. Extrinsic facilitators were social, informational, financial and institutional in nature. Conclusion: This study fills existing knowledge gaps in the literature by identifying the pre‐admissions barriers and facilitators encountered by aspiring physicians from LIB in Canada. The barriers and facilitators outlined in this study offer a framework for identifying target areas in developing support for admitting medical students from LIB. Given that medical students from LIB are more likely to serve underserved populations, our study is relevant to Canadian medical schools' social accountability commitment to producing physicians that meet the health needs of marginalised and vulnerable patients. Out of concern for socioeconomic diversity, the authors apply an intersectional approach to examine the barriers and facilitators faced by aspiring physicians from low‐income backgrounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Organizational Workplace Mental Health: An Emerging Role for Occupational Therapy.
- Author
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Thompson, Alexandra N., Fugard, Madison I., and Kirsh, Bonnie
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WORK environment , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *WELL-being , *HUMAN research subjects , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *RESEARCH methodology , *MENTAL health , *INTERVIEWING , *OCCUPATIONAL therapy , *QUALITATIVE research , *INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *JUDGMENT sampling , *STATISTICAL sampling , *THEMATIC analysis , *OCCUPATIONAL therapists , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is threefold: firstly, to provide a brief overview of current practice in workplace mental health and introduce an emerging role for occupational therapy in this field (i.e., practicing at the organizational level where "clients" are workplaces or organizations, and not individual workers); secondly, to present the findings from a small qualitative study which describes this emerging role from the perspectives of occupational therapists who have worked in this area; and thirdly, to provide suggestions for future work which could advance this emerging role for occupational therapy world-wide. Previous research suggests that there is an increasing interest among employers to address workplace mental health through organizational initiatives and that occupational therapists are beginning to consult on the topic. Occupational therapists in our small qualitative study described their role in organizational workplace mental health as one which involves adopting a business lens, practicing in an organization-centred manner, and focusing on population health promotion. Suggestions for future work to advance this emerging role include identifying the fundamental elements of the business lens, investigating models and frameworks to guide organization-centred practice, evaluating the short-, medium-, and long-term outcomes of interventions, exploring the fit between an occupational perspective and workplace mental health, and examining the impact of COVID-19 on current practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Navigating interprofessional boundaries: Midwifery students in Canada.
- Author
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Neiterman, Elena, HakemZadeh, Farimah, Zeytinoglu, Isik U., Kaminska, Karolina, Oltean, Irina, Plenderleith, Jennifer, and Lobb, Derek
- Subjects
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MIDWIVES , *PROFESSIONAL ethics , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *SOCIALIZATION , *HEALTH occupations students , *GROUNDED theory , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *SOCIAL boundaries , *QUALITATIVE research , *INTERNSHIP programs , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *PROFESSIONAL identity , *COMMUNICATION , *STUDENT attitudes - Abstract
The literature on professional socialization focuses on how students adopt and internalize professional identities and values, and assumes that boundary work is essential to learning how best to practice their profession. However, a focus on boundary work in the context of midwifery training - which is embedded in the gendered and hierarchical landscape of maternity care - is lacking. Thus, this article examines how Canadian student-midwives learn to navigate and negotiate interprofessional boundaries. Grounded in a symbolic interactionist approach, it draws on 31 semi-structured qualitative interviews from a mixed-methods national study on midwifery retention, explores how midwifery students make sense of the tensions among midwives, physicians, and nurses, and describes what strategies they utilize when navigating boundaries. Our analysis, based in constructivist grounded theory, revealed that participants learned about interprofessional tensions in clinical placement encounters via direct or indirect interactions with other healthcare professionals, and that strategies to navigate these tensions included educating others about midwifery training and adopting a learner identity. This article proposes that the process of professional socialization enables to reshape professional boundaries and that students are not only learners but also agents of change. These findings may yield practical applications in health education by highlighting opportunities for improving interprofessional collaborations. • Boundary work is part of professional socialization process. • Professional boundaries are ambiguous in midwifery but they are understudied. • This paper examines boundary work among 31 Canadian midwifery students. • The boundaries were clear with physicians but blurred in communication with nurses. • Learning about boundaries, students recreated them but also became agents of change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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