T. Power, L. Geia, Denise Wilson, T. Clark, Roianne West, Odette Best
{"title":"文化安全:超越修辞","authors":"T. Power, L. Geia, Denise Wilson, T. Clark, Roianne West, Odette Best","doi":"10.1080/10376178.2022.2087704","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"We acknowledge the sovereignty of Indigenous peoples across the Earth as the traditional custodians of Country, and their timeless and embodied relationships with cultures, communities, lands, waters, and sky. We pay our respects to Elders, past and present, particularly those who led the way, allowing us to realise our own calling to be healers. In this second iteration of a two-part special issue on Cultural Safety, we the Australian and Aotearoa New Zealand members of the guest editorial team would like to take this opportunity to draw attention to two contemporary examples of institutional racism in nursing and midwifery care in our respective countries. Despite decades of Indigenous activism, antiracism educational initiatives, and regulatory reforms, racism continues to be an endemic oppressive element in nursing and midwifery, and health systems. Despite Indigenous knowledges, anti-racism and Cultural Safety mandates being embedded in our professional standards and codes of conduct (Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia, 2018; Nursing Council of New Zealand, 2011), we are forced to continue to interrogate the ongoing practice of culturally unsafe nursing and midwifery care. As a guest editorial team, we are also members of our Indigenous communities. We share the lived experience of family and community, of marginalisation, intergenerational trauma, and the profound bereavement of deaths from preventable health conditions. Statistics tell a narrative of deficit, of inequitable determinants of health and disproportion in our Indigenous health status compared to the mainstream population. As Indigenous nurses and midwives, we are also members of an international body of health care professionals where we have seen and experienced racism in our respective national health care systems. We bring witness to its complicit role in enacting direct and indirect trauma upon Indigenous peoples and their communities from culturally unsafe, and negligent nursing and midwifery practices. The examples of unsafe practices we share in this paper are to highlight our argument that systemic racism continues to go unchecked and reforms at leadership and policy levels are not addressing the issue with expedience.","PeriodicalId":55633,"journal":{"name":"Contemporary Nurse","volume":"26 1","pages":"1 - 7"},"PeriodicalIF":1.2000,"publicationDate":"2022-01-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Cultural Safety: Beyond the rhetoric\",\"authors\":\"T. Power, L. Geia, Denise Wilson, T. Clark, Roianne West, Odette Best\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/10376178.2022.2087704\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"We acknowledge the sovereignty of Indigenous peoples across the Earth as the traditional custodians of Country, and their timeless and embodied relationships with cultures, communities, lands, waters, and sky. We pay our respects to Elders, past and present, particularly those who led the way, allowing us to realise our own calling to be healers. In this second iteration of a two-part special issue on Cultural Safety, we the Australian and Aotearoa New Zealand members of the guest editorial team would like to take this opportunity to draw attention to two contemporary examples of institutional racism in nursing and midwifery care in our respective countries. Despite decades of Indigenous activism, antiracism educational initiatives, and regulatory reforms, racism continues to be an endemic oppressive element in nursing and midwifery, and health systems. Despite Indigenous knowledges, anti-racism and Cultural Safety mandates being embedded in our professional standards and codes of conduct (Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia, 2018; Nursing Council of New Zealand, 2011), we are forced to continue to interrogate the ongoing practice of culturally unsafe nursing and midwifery care. As a guest editorial team, we are also members of our Indigenous communities. We share the lived experience of family and community, of marginalisation, intergenerational trauma, and the profound bereavement of deaths from preventable health conditions. Statistics tell a narrative of deficit, of inequitable determinants of health and disproportion in our Indigenous health status compared to the mainstream population. As Indigenous nurses and midwives, we are also members of an international body of health care professionals where we have seen and experienced racism in our respective national health care systems. We bring witness to its complicit role in enacting direct and indirect trauma upon Indigenous peoples and their communities from culturally unsafe, and negligent nursing and midwifery practices. 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We acknowledge the sovereignty of Indigenous peoples across the Earth as the traditional custodians of Country, and their timeless and embodied relationships with cultures, communities, lands, waters, and sky. We pay our respects to Elders, past and present, particularly those who led the way, allowing us to realise our own calling to be healers. In this second iteration of a two-part special issue on Cultural Safety, we the Australian and Aotearoa New Zealand members of the guest editorial team would like to take this opportunity to draw attention to two contemporary examples of institutional racism in nursing and midwifery care in our respective countries. Despite decades of Indigenous activism, antiracism educational initiatives, and regulatory reforms, racism continues to be an endemic oppressive element in nursing and midwifery, and health systems. Despite Indigenous knowledges, anti-racism and Cultural Safety mandates being embedded in our professional standards and codes of conduct (Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia, 2018; Nursing Council of New Zealand, 2011), we are forced to continue to interrogate the ongoing practice of culturally unsafe nursing and midwifery care. As a guest editorial team, we are also members of our Indigenous communities. We share the lived experience of family and community, of marginalisation, intergenerational trauma, and the profound bereavement of deaths from preventable health conditions. Statistics tell a narrative of deficit, of inequitable determinants of health and disproportion in our Indigenous health status compared to the mainstream population. As Indigenous nurses and midwives, we are also members of an international body of health care professionals where we have seen and experienced racism in our respective national health care systems. We bring witness to its complicit role in enacting direct and indirect trauma upon Indigenous peoples and their communities from culturally unsafe, and negligent nursing and midwifery practices. The examples of unsafe practices we share in this paper are to highlight our argument that systemic racism continues to go unchecked and reforms at leadership and policy levels are not addressing the issue with expedience.
期刊介绍:
Contemporary Nurse is an international peer-reviewed journal designed to increase nursing skills, knowledge and communication, assist in professional development and to enhance educational standards by publishing stimulating, informative and useful articles on a range of issues influencing professional nursing research, teaching and practice.
Contemporary Nurse is a forum for nursing educators, researchers and professionals who require high-quality, peer-reviewed research on emerging research fronts, perspectives and protocols, community and family health, cross-cultural research, recruitment, retention, education, training and practitioner perspectives.
Contemporary Nurse publishes original research articles, reviews and discussion papers.