Department of Recreation and Leisure Studies, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 3G1.
Soc Sci Med. 2013 Aug;91:194-201. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.08.009. Epub 2012 Aug 18.
This paper addresses the gap in health services and policy research about the implications of everyday weather for health care work. Building on previous research on the weather-related challenges of caregiving in homes and communities, it examines the experiences of 'seasonal bad weather' for health care workers in long-term care institutions. It features a hermeneutic phenomenology analysis of six transcripts from interviews with nurses and personal support workers from a qualitative study of institutional long-term care work in rural Canada. Focussing on van Manen's existential themes of lived experience (body, relations, space, time), the analysis reveals important contradictions between the lived experiences of health care workers coping with bad weather and long-term care policies and practices that mitigate weather-related risk and vulnerability. The findings contribute to the growing concern for rural health issues particularly the neglected experiences of rural health providers and, in doing so, offer insight into the recent call for greater attention to the geographies of health care work.
本文探讨了卫生服务和政策研究中的一个空白,即日常天气对医疗保健工作的影响。本文在前人关于家庭和社区中与天气相关的护理挑战的研究基础上,考察了长期护理机构中医疗保健工作者应对“季节性恶劣天气”的体验。本文采用解释学现象学分析方法,对加拿大农村地区机构长期护理工作的定性研究中 6 名护士和个人支持工作者的访谈记录进行了分析。该分析聚焦于范梅南的生存体验主题(身体、关系、空间、时间),揭示了应对恶劣天气的医疗保健工作者的生活体验与减轻与天气相关的风险和脆弱性的长期护理政策和实践之间的重要矛盾。研究结果有助于人们日益关注农村健康问题,特别是农村卫生提供者被忽视的体验,并为此提供了对最近呼吁更多关注医疗保健工作地理的见解。