Herk Kimberley Anne Van, Smith Dawn, Andrew Caroline
University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Contemp Nurse. 2010;37(1):57-68. doi: 10.5172/conu.2011.37.1.057.
This paper reports on research examining how service providers' perceptions of Aboriginal women's identities contributes to their experiences of accessing preventive care during pregnancy and parenting in an urban setting. An intersectionality paradigm was adopted to conduct a secondary analysis of purposively selected transcripts of exploratory interviews with Aboriginal women. Findings indicate that how Aboriginal women identity as mothers was perceived by service providers was the focal point at which women described positive or negative experiences of accessing care. These conclusions challenge nurses' understandings of developing therapeutic relationships with marginalised populations and highlight the necessity of examining how perceptions of identity shape issues of oppression and discrimination within therapeutic relationships.
本文报道了一项研究,该研究探讨了在城市环境中,服务提供者对原住民妇女身份的认知如何影响她们在孕期和育儿期间获得预防性护理的经历。采用交叉性范式对有目的地选取的与原住民妇女进行的探索性访谈记录进行二次分析。研究结果表明,服务提供者对原住民妇女作为母亲身份的认知是她们描述获得护理的积极或消极经历的焦点。这些结论挑战了护士对与边缘化人群建立治疗关系的理解,并强调了审视身份认知如何在治疗关系中塑造压迫和歧视问题的必要性。