"Let's Call a Spade a Spade. My Barrier is Being a Black Student": Challenges for Black Undergraduate Nursing Students in a Western Canadian Province.

IF 1.7 Q2 NURSING Canadian Journal of Nursing Research Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-09-03 DOI:10.1177/08445621231198632
Florence Luhanga, Sithokozile Maposa, Vivian Puplampu, Eunice Abudu
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Abstract

Background: We need more understanding of experiences that hinder or promote equity, diversity, and inclusion of Black students in undergraduate nursing programs to better inform their retention and success.

Purpose: To explore documented experiences of Black undergraduate nursing students, review barriers affecting their retention and success, and suggest evidence-based strategies to mitigate barriers that influence their well-being.

Methods: We used a focused qualitative ethnography for recruiting Black former and current students (N = 18) in a Western Canadian province's undergraduate nursing programs via purposive and snowball sampling. Most participants were female, 34 years or younger, with over 50% currently in a nursing program. Five participants later attended a focus group to further validate the findings from the individual interviews. Descriptive statistics were used to describe participant characteristics; we applied a collaborative constant comparison and thematic analysis approach to their narratives.

Results: Challenges influencing Black students' retention and success fell into four main interrelated subthemes: disengaging and hostile learning environments, systemic institutional and program barriers, navigation of personal struggles in disempowering learning environments, and recommendations to improve the delivery of nursing programs. Participants also recommended ways to improve diversity and mitigate these barriers, such as nursing programs offering anti-oppression courses, platforms for safe/healthy dialogue, and more culturally sensitive learning-centered programs and responsive supports.

Conclusions: The study findings underscore the need for research to better define nursing program conditions that nurture safe, learning-centred environments for Black students. A rethink of non-discriminatory, healthy learning-teaching engagements of Black students and the mitigation of anti-Black racism can best position institutions to promote equity, diversity, and inclusion of Black students.

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“让我们把黑桃称为黑桃。我的障碍是成为一名黑人学生”:加拿大西部省份黑人护理本科生面临的挑战。
背景:我们需要更多地了解阻碍或促进黑人学生在本科护理项目中的公平、多样性和包容性的经历,以更好地了解他们的保留和成功。目的:探讨黑人护理本科生的记录经历,回顾影响他们保留和成功的障碍,并提出基于证据的策略来减轻影响他们幸福的障碍 = 18) 在加拿大西部一个省的本科生护理项目中,通过有目的和滚雪球抽样。大多数参与者是34岁或以下的女性,其中超过50%的人目前正在参加护理项目。五名参与者随后参加了一个焦点小组,以进一步验证个人访谈的结果。描述性统计被用来描述参与者的特征;我们对他们的叙述采用了合作的持续比较和主题分析方法。结果:影响黑人学生保留和成功的挑战分为四个主要的相互关联的子主题:脱离和敌对的学习环境、系统性的制度和项目障碍、在失去权力的学习环境中引导个人斗争,以及改进护理项目实施的建议。参与者还建议了提高多样性和减轻这些障碍的方法,例如提供反压迫课程的护理项目、安全/健康对话平台,以及更具文化敏感性的以学习为中心的项目和响应性支持。结论:研究结果强调了研究的必要性,以更好地定义护理项目条件,为黑人学生培养安全、以学习为中心的环境。重新思考黑人学生的非歧视性、健康的学习和教学活动,以及缓解反黑人种族主义,可以使机构更好地促进黑人学生的公平、多样性和包容性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
4.80%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: We are pleased to announce the launch of the CJNR digital archive, an online archive available through the McGill University Library, and hosted by the McGill University Library Digital Collections Program in perpetuity. This archive has been made possible through a Richard M. Tomlinson Digital Library Innovation and Access Award to the McGill School of Nursing. The Richard M. Tomlinson award recognizes the ongoing contribution and commitment the CJNR has made to the McGill School of Nursing, and to the development and nursing science in Canada and worldwide. We hope this archive proves to be an invaluable research tool for researchers in Nursing and other faculties.
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