Decolonisation for health: A lifelong process of unlearning for Australian white nurse educators.

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q1 NURSING Nursing Inquiry Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2023-11-29 DOI:10.1111/nin.12616
Elizabeth Rix, Frances Doran, Beth Wrigley, Darlene Rotumah
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Abstract

Indigenous nurse scholars across nations colonised by Europeans articulate the need for accomplices (as opposed to mere performative allies) to work alongside them and support their ongoing struggle for health equity and respect and to prioritise and promote culturally safe healthcare. Although cultural safety is now being mandated in nursing codes of practice as a strategy to address racism in healthcare, it is important that white nurse educators have a comprehensive understanding about cultural safety and the pedagogical skills needed to teach it to undergraduate nurses. We open this article with stories of our journeys as two white nurses in becoming accomplices and working alongside Indigenous Peoples, as patients and colleagues. Our lived experience of the inertia of healthcare and education organisations to address systemic and institutional resistance to the practice of cultural safety underpins the intention of this article. We understand that delivering this challenging and complex topic effectively and respectfully is best achieved when Indigenous and white educators work together at the cultural interface. Doing so requires commitment from white nurses and power holders within universities and healthcare institutions. A decolonising approach to nurse education at individual and institutional levels is fundamental to support and grow the work that needs to be done to reduce health inequity and increase cultural safety. White nurse accomplices can play an important role in teaching future nurses the importance of critical reflection and aiming to reduce power imbalances and racism within healthcare environments. Reducing power imbalances in healthcare environments and decolonising nursing practice is the strength of a cultural safety framework.

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健康非殖民化:澳大利亚白人护士教育工作者的终身忘却过程。
被欧洲人殖民过的各个国家的土著护士学者明确表示,需要帮助者(而不仅仅是表演盟友)与他们一起工作,支持他们为卫生公平和尊重而进行的斗争,并优先考虑和促进文化上安全的医疗保健。虽然文化安全现在作为解决医疗保健中的种族主义的一种策略被强制纳入护理实践准则,但白人护士教育者对文化安全有一个全面的了解,并具备向本科护士教授文化安全所需的教学技能,这一点很重要。我们在这篇文章的开头讲述了我们作为两名白人护士的故事,讲述了我们作为病人和同事,成为土著人民的同谋,与土著人民一起工作的旅程。我们对医疗保健和教育机构在解决对文化安全实践的系统性和制度性抵制方面的惯性的生活经验巩固了本文的意图。我们明白,只有土著和白人教育者在文化界面上共同努力,才能有效和尊重地传达这一具有挑战性和复杂的主题。这样做需要白人护士以及大学和医疗机构的掌权者的承诺。在个人和机构层面对护士教育采取非殖民化做法,对于支持和发展减少卫生不平等和增加文化安全所需开展的工作至关重要。白人护士帮凶可以在教育未来护士批判性反思的重要性以及旨在减少医疗保健环境中的权力不平衡和种族主义方面发挥重要作用。减少医疗保健环境中的权力不平衡和非殖民化护理实践是文化安全框架的优势。
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来源期刊
Nursing Inquiry
Nursing Inquiry 医学-护理
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
13.00%
发文量
61
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Nursing Inquiry aims to stimulate examination of nursing''s current and emerging practices, conditions and contexts within an expanding international community of ideas. The journal aspires to excite thinking and stimulate action toward a preferred future for health and healthcare by encouraging critical reflection and lively debate on matters affecting and influenced by nursing from a range of disciplinary angles, scientific perspectives, analytic approaches, social locations and philosophical positions.
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