School of Nursing and Midwifery, Aga Khan University, Nairobi, Kenya.
School of Medicine, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia.
J Clin Nurs. 2018 Nov;27(21-22):4050-4057. doi: 10.1111/jocn.14540. Epub 2018 Jul 26.
To assess the impact of nursing education on the intergenerational mobility of graduates of nursing upskilling programmes.
Challenges for low- and middle-income countries include poverty and limited access to health, education and social services compounded by workforce shortages, inequality and female disempowerment. Little is known about the impact of nursing education on women's empowerment and intergenerational mobility in such settings.
A cross-sectional study using data collected through an online alumni survey.
Data were collected March to May 2016 using an online questionnaire, as part of a larger nursing programme alumni survey. Intergenerational mobility was assessed by comparing the respondents' educational qualification with their fathers' and mothers' education levels. Descriptive statistics were analysed using frequencies and percentages. Associations between parental and respondents' education levels were assessed using chi-square tests.
Out of 446 female respondents who completed the survey, 379 and 366 indicated their fathers' and mothers' education level, respectively. A third of the respondents' mothers had no formal schooling; lower levels of parental education are significantly associated with increase in respondents age (p < 0.001) and associated shift from Uganda to Kenya and Tanzania (p < 0.001). Respondents had a marked upward intergenerational education mobility with 76% (278/366) and 59% (223/379) of them achieving a qualification two levels above their mothers and fathers, respectively. Tanzanian respondents had significantly higher rates of upward mobility than Kenyan and Ugandan respondents.
Nursing education positively impacted gender, economic factors and health outcomes. Further research is needed to confirm the "triple impact" of nursing education on improving health, gender equality and economic growth in low- and middle-income countries.
Nurses are frontline providers of healthcare services. Provision of high-quality nursing upgrade programmes enhances nursing leadership ability, with aligned improvements in health outcomes while supporting gender empowerment and intergenerational mobility.
评估护理教育对护理技能提升项目毕业生代际流动的影响。
低收入和中等收入国家面临的挑战包括贫困以及获得卫生、教育和社会服务的机会有限,加上劳动力短缺、不平等和女性无权,这些问题使情况更加复杂。在这种情况下,护理教育对妇女赋权和代际流动的影响知之甚少。
使用通过在线校友调查收集的数据进行的横断面研究。
数据于 2016 年 3 月至 5 月通过在线问卷收集,作为更大的护理计划校友调查的一部分。通过将受访者的教育资格与其父母的教育水平进行比较来评估代际流动。使用频率和百分比分析描述性统计数据。使用卡方检验评估父母和受访者教育水平之间的关联。
在完成调查的 446 名女性受访者中,有 379 名和 366 名分别表示其父亲和母亲的教育水平。三分之一的受访者的母亲没有接受过正规教育;父母的教育程度较低与受访者年龄的增加显著相关(p<0.001),并与从乌干达转移到肯尼亚和坦桑尼亚的情况相关(p<0.001)。受访者的代际教育流动明显上升,其中 76%(278/366)和 59%(223/379)的人分别获得了比母亲和父亲高两级的资格。坦桑尼亚受访者的向上流动率明显高于肯尼亚和乌干达受访者。
护理教育对性别、经济因素和健康结果产生了积极影响。需要进一步研究以确认护理教育对改善低和中等收入国家的健康、性别平等和经济增长的“三重影响”。
护士是医疗保健服务的一线提供者。提供高质量的护理升级计划可增强护理领导力能力,同时改善健康结果,支持性别赋权和代际流动。