Is teaching anti-Black racism relevant when recreating a post-COVID nursing curriculum?

P. Boakye, N. Prendergast
{"title":"Is teaching anti-Black racism relevant when recreating a post-COVID nursing curriculum?","authors":"P. Boakye, N. Prendergast","doi":"10.33137/utjph.v3i1.37696","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract\nDuring the COVID-19 pandemic several issues were galvanized as global urgencies. One of which was racism, following reports that Black and low-income communities were disproportionately impacted by the pandemic (Public Health Agency of Canada, 2021) and the lack of race-based data in Canada (Ahmed et al.,2021). But it was the racially induced killing of George Floyd and others that brought global awareness through the Black Lives Matter movement of the extent of structural and institutional racism. We witnessed a convergence of protests regarding anti-Black racism, anti-Indigenous racism, anti-Asian racism, and more recently Islamophobia. These series of events have led to emerging and compelling questions from millennials and Generation Zs within the nursing classroom. Nursing education is called to embrace and draw upon multiple forms of pedagogies, methodologies, and theories that reflect and support student learning and enquiry (Coleman, 2020; Prendergast et al., 2020;).\nNursing education’s longstanding history with colonial frameworks, practices, and standards (Holmes, 2008; McGibbon et al, 2014; Waite & Nardi, 2019), attests to the need to decolonize the nursing classroom, which in effect will decolonize colonial practices within clinical settings. One approach to assist nursing education in the classroom and workplace setting is introducing anti-Black racism (ABR) within the nursing curricula. ABR was coined by Akua Benjamin (2003) to explain the historical, lived experiences of African Canadians, and how colonial legacies in policies and institutions continue to mask racist practices. ABR creates spaces of resistances that can protect recipients and providers of the healthcare system and can disclose and rupture any invisible forms of inequitable practices. \nBased on the four tenets of ABR, which are, history, experience, invisibility, and legacy, ABR creates critical thinking and dialogues across multiple barriers, therefore providing opportunities for transformative learning and action. By implementing ABR within the nursing curricula, nurses may gain meaningful insights into the various ways racism plays out in the lived experiences of Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour by engaging the student into historical events and lived experiences that expound on varied forms of physical, mental and social enslavements. This presentation will conceptually illustrate the relevance of implementing anti-Black racism within Canadian nursing curricula as an effective strategy that can respond to issues pervading the current climate as well as support student learning and development. As nursing has an ethical responsibility to prepare and educate students to care and protect patients, nursing is also called upon to decolonize its classroom, reform educators and students, and create new practices that will reflect a new, post covid curricula.\nReferences\nAhmed, R., Omer, J., Ishak, W., Nabi, K., & Mustafa, N. (2021). Racial equity in the fight against COVID-19: a qualitative study examining the importance of collecting race-based data in the Canadian context. Tropical Diseases, Travel Medicine and Vaccines, 7, 1-6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40794-021-00138-2\nBenjamin, L. A. (2003). The Black/Jamaican criminal: The making of ideology (Publication No.305258209). [Doctoral dissertation, University of Toronto]. ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global.\nColeman, T. (2020). Anti-racism in nursing education: Recommendations for racial justice praxis. Journal of Nursing Education, 59(11), 642-645. doi: 10.3928/01484834-20201020-08 \nHolmes, D., Roy, B. & Perron, A. (2008). The Use of Postcolonialism in the Nursing Domain. Advances in Nursing Science, 31 (1), 42-51.  doi: 10.1097/01.ANS.0000311528.73564.83\nMcGibbon, E., Mulaudzi, F. M., Didham, P., Barton, S., & Sochan, A. (2014). Toward decolonizing nursing: The colonization of nursing and strategies for increasing the counter‐narrative. Nursing inquiry, 21(3), 179-191.\nPublic Health Agency of Canada. (2020). Social determinants and inequities in health for Black Canadians: A snapshot.\nhttps://www.canada.ca/en/public-health/services/health-promotion/population-health/what-determines-health/social-determinants-inequities-black-canadians-snapshot.html\nPrendergast, N., Abumbi, G., & Beausoleil, L. (2020). An open letter to CNA on the reality of racism in nursing.  https://canadian-nurse.com/en/articles/issues/2020/august-2020/an-open-letter-to-cna-on-the-reality-of-racism-in-nursing.\nWaite, R., & Nardi, D. (2019). Nursing colonialism in America: Implications for nursing leadership. Journal of Professional Nursing, 35(1), 18-25.\nNursing education’s longstanding history with colonial frameworks, practices, and standards (Holmes, 2008; McGibbon et al, 2014; Waite & Nardi, 2019), attests to the need to decolonize the nursing classroom, which in effect will decolonize colonial practices within clinical settings. One approach to assist nursing education in the classroom and workplace setting is introducing anti-Black racism (ABR) within the nursing curricula. ABR was coined by Akua Benjamin (2003) to explain the historical, lived experiences of African Canadians, and how colonial legacies in policies and institutions continue to mask racist practices. ABR creates spaces of resistances that can protect recipients and providers of the healthcare system and can disclose and rupture any invisible forms of inequitable practices. \nBased on the four tenets of ABR, which are, history, experience, invisibility, and legacy, ABR creates critical thinking and dialogues across multiple barriers, therefore providing opportunities for transformative learning and action. By implementing ABR within the nursing curricula, nurses may gain meaningful insights into the various ways racism plays out in the lived experiences of Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour by engaging the student into historical events and lived experiences that expound on varied forms of physical, mental and social enslavements. This presentation will conceptually illustrate the relevance of implementing anti-Black racism within Canadian nursing curricula as an effective strategy that can respond to issues pervading the current climate as well as support student learning and development. As nursing has an ethical responsibility to prepare and educate students to care and protect patients, nursing is also called upon to decolonize its classroom, reform educators and students, and create new practices that will reflect a new, post covid curricula.","PeriodicalId":265882,"journal":{"name":"University of Toronto Journal of Public Health","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-03-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"University of Toronto Journal of Public Health","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.33137/utjph.v3i1.37696","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract During the COVID-19 pandemic several issues were galvanized as global urgencies. One of which was racism, following reports that Black and low-income communities were disproportionately impacted by the pandemic (Public Health Agency of Canada, 2021) and the lack of race-based data in Canada (Ahmed et al.,2021). But it was the racially induced killing of George Floyd and others that brought global awareness through the Black Lives Matter movement of the extent of structural and institutional racism. We witnessed a convergence of protests regarding anti-Black racism, anti-Indigenous racism, anti-Asian racism, and more recently Islamophobia. These series of events have led to emerging and compelling questions from millennials and Generation Zs within the nursing classroom. Nursing education is called to embrace and draw upon multiple forms of pedagogies, methodologies, and theories that reflect and support student learning and enquiry (Coleman, 2020; Prendergast et al., 2020;). Nursing education’s longstanding history with colonial frameworks, practices, and standards (Holmes, 2008; McGibbon et al, 2014; Waite & Nardi, 2019), attests to the need to decolonize the nursing classroom, which in effect will decolonize colonial practices within clinical settings. One approach to assist nursing education in the classroom and workplace setting is introducing anti-Black racism (ABR) within the nursing curricula. ABR was coined by Akua Benjamin (2003) to explain the historical, lived experiences of African Canadians, and how colonial legacies in policies and institutions continue to mask racist practices. ABR creates spaces of resistances that can protect recipients and providers of the healthcare system and can disclose and rupture any invisible forms of inequitable practices.  Based on the four tenets of ABR, which are, history, experience, invisibility, and legacy, ABR creates critical thinking and dialogues across multiple barriers, therefore providing opportunities for transformative learning and action. By implementing ABR within the nursing curricula, nurses may gain meaningful insights into the various ways racism plays out in the lived experiences of Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour by engaging the student into historical events and lived experiences that expound on varied forms of physical, mental and social enslavements. This presentation will conceptually illustrate the relevance of implementing anti-Black racism within Canadian nursing curricula as an effective strategy that can respond to issues pervading the current climate as well as support student learning and development. As nursing has an ethical responsibility to prepare and educate students to care and protect patients, nursing is also called upon to decolonize its classroom, reform educators and students, and create new practices that will reflect a new, post covid curricula. References Ahmed, R., Omer, J., Ishak, W., Nabi, K., & Mustafa, N. (2021). Racial equity in the fight against COVID-19: a qualitative study examining the importance of collecting race-based data in the Canadian context. Tropical Diseases, Travel Medicine and Vaccines, 7, 1-6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40794-021-00138-2 Benjamin, L. A. (2003). The Black/Jamaican criminal: The making of ideology (Publication No.305258209). [Doctoral dissertation, University of Toronto]. ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global. Coleman, T. (2020). Anti-racism in nursing education: Recommendations for racial justice praxis. Journal of Nursing Education, 59(11), 642-645. doi: 10.3928/01484834-20201020-08 Holmes, D., Roy, B. & Perron, A. (2008). The Use of Postcolonialism in the Nursing Domain. Advances in Nursing Science, 31 (1), 42-51.  doi: 10.1097/01.ANS.0000311528.73564.83 McGibbon, E., Mulaudzi, F. M., Didham, P., Barton, S., & Sochan, A. (2014). Toward decolonizing nursing: The colonization of nursing and strategies for increasing the counter‐narrative. Nursing inquiry, 21(3), 179-191. Public Health Agency of Canada. (2020). Social determinants and inequities in health for Black Canadians: A snapshot. https://www.canada.ca/en/public-health/services/health-promotion/population-health/what-determines-health/social-determinants-inequities-black-canadians-snapshot.html Prendergast, N., Abumbi, G., & Beausoleil, L. (2020). An open letter to CNA on the reality of racism in nursing.  https://canadian-nurse.com/en/articles/issues/2020/august-2020/an-open-letter-to-cna-on-the-reality-of-racism-in-nursing. Waite, R., & Nardi, D. (2019). Nursing colonialism in America: Implications for nursing leadership. Journal of Professional Nursing, 35(1), 18-25. Nursing education’s longstanding history with colonial frameworks, practices, and standards (Holmes, 2008; McGibbon et al, 2014; Waite & Nardi, 2019), attests to the need to decolonize the nursing classroom, which in effect will decolonize colonial practices within clinical settings. One approach to assist nursing education in the classroom and workplace setting is introducing anti-Black racism (ABR) within the nursing curricula. ABR was coined by Akua Benjamin (2003) to explain the historical, lived experiences of African Canadians, and how colonial legacies in policies and institutions continue to mask racist practices. ABR creates spaces of resistances that can protect recipients and providers of the healthcare system and can disclose and rupture any invisible forms of inequitable practices.  Based on the four tenets of ABR, which are, history, experience, invisibility, and legacy, ABR creates critical thinking and dialogues across multiple barriers, therefore providing opportunities for transformative learning and action. By implementing ABR within the nursing curricula, nurses may gain meaningful insights into the various ways racism plays out in the lived experiences of Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour by engaging the student into historical events and lived experiences that expound on varied forms of physical, mental and social enslavements. This presentation will conceptually illustrate the relevance of implementing anti-Black racism within Canadian nursing curricula as an effective strategy that can respond to issues pervading the current climate as well as support student learning and development. As nursing has an ethical responsibility to prepare and educate students to care and protect patients, nursing is also called upon to decolonize its classroom, reform educators and students, and create new practices that will reflect a new, post covid curricula.
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在重建covid后护理课程时,教授反黑人种族主义是否相关?
在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,一些问题被激发为全球紧迫问题。其中之一是种族主义,此前有报告称,黑人和低收入社区受到大流行病的影响不成比例(加拿大公共卫生署,2021年),加拿大缺乏基于种族的数据(Ahmed等人,2021年)。但正是乔治·弗洛伊德(George Floyd)等人因种族原因被杀的事件,通过“黑人的命也是命”(Black Lives Matter)运动,让全球意识到结构性和体制性种族主义的严重程度。我们目睹了针对反黑人种族主义、反土著种族主义、反亚洲种族主义以及最近的伊斯兰恐惧症的抗议活动的汇合。这一系列事件引发了千禧一代和z世代在护理课堂上提出的令人信服的新问题。护理教育需要接受并利用多种形式的教学法、方法和理论,以反映和支持学生的学习和探究(Coleman, 2020;Prendergast et al., 2020;)。护理教育具有殖民框架、实践和标准的悠久历史(Holmes, 2008;McGibbon et al ., 2014;Waite & Nardi, 2019)证明了护理教室非殖民化的必要性,这实际上将使临床环境中的殖民做法非殖民化。辅助护理教育在课堂和工作场所设置的一种方法是在护理课程中引入反黑人种族主义(ABR)。ABR是由Akua Benjamin(2003)创造的,用来解释非裔加拿大人的历史和生活经历,以及政策和制度中的殖民遗产如何继续掩盖种族主义行为。ABR创造了抵抗空间,可以保护医疗保健系统的接受者和提供者,并可以揭露和打破任何无形形式的不公平做法。基于ABR的四个原则,即历史、经验、不可见性和遗产,ABR创造了跨越多种障碍的批判性思维和对话,从而为变革性学习和行动提供了机会。通过在护理课程中实施ABR,护士可以通过让学生参与历史事件和生活经历,阐述各种形式的身体、精神和社会奴役,从而对种族主义在黑人、土著和有色人种的生活经历中发挥的各种方式获得有意义的见解。本次演讲将从概念上说明在加拿大护理课程中实施反黑人种族主义的相关性,作为一种有效的策略,可以应对当前气候中普遍存在的问题,并支持学生的学习和发展。由于护理在培养和教育学生照顾和保护患者方面负有道德责任,因此还呼吁护理在课堂上非殖民化,改革教育工作者和学生,并创造新的实践,以反映新的后covid课程。参考文献ahmed, R., Omer, J., Ishak, W., Nabi, K., & Mustafa, N.(2021)。抗击COVID-19中的种族平等:一项定性研究,探讨在加拿大背景下收集基于种族的数据的重要性。热带病,旅行医学和疫苗,7,1-6。http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40794-021-00138-2Benjamin, l.a.(2003)。黑人/牙买加罪犯:意识形态的制造(出版物编号305258209)。[博士论文,多伦多大学]。ProQuest学位论文和论文全球。科尔曼,T.(2020)。护理教育中的反种族主义:对种族正义实践的建议。护理教育杂志,59(11),642-645。Holmes, D, Roy, B. & Perron, A.(2008)。后殖民主义在护理领域的应用。护理科学进展,31(1),42-51。doi: 10.1097/01.ANS.0000311528.73564.83McGibbon, E., Mulaudzi, F. M., Didham, P., Barton, S., & Sochan, A.(2014)。走向非殖民化护理:护理的殖民化和增加反叙事的策略。护理问诊,21(3),179-191。加拿大公共卫生署。(2020)。加拿大黑人健康的社会决定因素和不平等:快照。https://www.canada.ca/en/public-health/services/health-promotion/population-health/what-determines-health/social-determinants-inequities-black-canadians-snapshot.htmlPrendergast, N., Abumbi, G., & Beausoleil .(2020)。致CNA的一封关于护理中种族主义现实的公开信。https://canadian-nurse.com/en/articles/issues/2020/august-2020/an-open-letter-to-cna-on-the-reality-of-racism-in-nursing.Waite, R., & Nardi, D.(2019)。美国护理殖民主义:对护理领导的启示。专业护理杂志,35(1),18-25。护理教育具有殖民框架、实践和标准的悠久历史(Holmes, 2008;McGibbon et al ., 2014;Waite & Nardi, 2019)证明了护理教室非殖民化的必要性,这实际上将使临床环境中的殖民做法非殖民化。 辅助护理教育在课堂和工作场所设置的一种方法是在护理课程中引入反黑人种族主义(ABR)。ABR是由Akua Benjamin(2003)创造的,用来解释非裔加拿大人的历史和生活经历,以及政策和制度中的殖民遗产如何继续掩盖种族主义行为。ABR创造了抵抗空间,可以保护医疗保健系统的接受者和提供者,并可以揭露和打破任何无形形式的不公平做法。基于ABR的四个原则,即历史、经验、不可见性和遗产,ABR创造了跨越多种障碍的批判性思维和对话,从而为变革性学习和行动提供了机会。通过在护理课程中实施ABR,护士可以通过让学生参与历史事件和生活经历,阐述各种形式的身体、精神和社会奴役,从而对种族主义在黑人、土著和有色人种的生活经历中发挥的各种方式获得有意义的见解。本次演讲将从概念上说明在加拿大护理课程中实施反黑人种族主义的相关性,作为一种有效的策略,可以应对当前气候中普遍存在的问题,并支持学生的学习和发展。由于护理在培养和教育学生照顾和保护患者方面负有道德责任,因此还呼吁护理在课堂上非殖民化,改革教育工作者和学生,并创造新的实践,以反映新的后covid课程。
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