Interpersonal, institutional, and structural racism in Canadian nursing: A culture of silence.

IF 1.7 Q2 NURSING Canadian Journal of Nursing Research Pub Date : 2023-06-01 Epub Date: 2022-06-23 DOI:10.1177/08445621221110140
Brenda L Beagan, Stephanie R Bizzeth, Josephine Etowa
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Background: Alongside declarations against racism, the nursing profession in Canada needs examination of experiences of racism within its ranks. Racism at multiple levels can create a context wherein racialized nurses experience barriers and ongoing marginalization.

Purpose: This critical interpretive qualitative study asks how interpersonal, institutional, and structural racisms intersect in the professional experiences of racialized nurses in Canada, and how nurses respond.

Methods: Self-identified racialized nurses (n = 13) from across Canada were recruited primarily through snowball sampling, and each was interviewed by phone or in person. Once transcribed, interviews were analyzed inductively, which led to the levels of racism as a guiding framework.

Results: From entry to nursing education throughout their careers participants experienced racism from instructors, patients, colleagues and managers. Interpersonal racism included comments and actions from patients, but more significantly lack of support from colleagues and managers, and sometimes overt exclusion. Institutional racism included extra scrutiny, heavier workloads, and absence in leadership roles. Structural racism included prevalent assumptions of incompetence, which were countered through extra work, invisibility and hyper-visibility, and expectations of assimilation. Racialized nurses were left to choose among silence, resisting (often at personal cost), assimilation and/or bolstering their credibility through education or extra work. Building community was a key survival strategy.

Conclusions: Everyone in nursing needs to challenge the culture of silence regarding racism. White nurses in particular need to welcome discomfort, listen and learn about racism, then speak out to help disrupt its normative status.

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加拿大护理中的人际、制度和结构性种族主义:沉默的文化。
背景:除了反对种族主义的宣言外,加拿大护理行业还需要审查其内部的种族主义经历。多个层面的种族主义会造成一种背景,在这种背景下,种族化的护士会遇到障碍和持续的边缘化。目的:这项批判性的解释性定性研究询问了人际、制度和结构种族主义在加拿大种族化护士的职业经历中如何交叉,以及护士如何应对。方法:自我认同的种族化护士(n = 13) 来自加拿大各地的人员主要通过滚雪球式抽样进行招募,每个人都接受了电话或亲自面试。采访一经转录,就进行归纳分析,从而得出种族主义的程度作为指导框架。结果:从进入护理教育到整个职业生涯,参与者都经历了来自导师、患者、同事和管理者的种族歧视。人际种族主义包括患者的评论和行为,但更明显的是缺乏同事和管理者的支持,有时甚至是公开的排斥。制度上的种族主义包括额外的审查、繁重的工作量和缺乏领导作用。结构性种族主义包括普遍存在的无能假设,通过额外的工作、隐形和超可见性以及对同化的期望来应对这些假设。种族化护士只能在沉默、抵抗(通常以个人为代价)、同化和/或通过教育或额外工作来提高他们的可信度之间做出选择。建立社区是一项关键的生存策略。结论:护理界的每个人都需要挑战对种族主义保持沉默的文化。白人护士尤其需要欢迎不适,倾听和了解种族主义,然后发声帮助破坏其规范地位。
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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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