联系,仪式和身份:医疗保健学生对代表弹性的物体的描述

A. Maddock, J. Oates
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引用次数: 1

摘要

目的保健学生的复原力是一个研究充分的主题,尽管这一概念在不断发展,尤其是因为"复原力建设"已成为保健学生专业教育的一个预期特征。本研究旨在从学生护士和助产士的角度理解弹性的概念。设计/方法/方法该研究采用了一种新颖的艺术方法,借鉴了米勒和特克尔关于“唤起性物体”的研究。来自伦敦一所大学的25名护士和助产士学生选择了“弹性物体”,并在一位艺术家研究员的采访中对其进行了拍照和讨论。调查结果对访谈的分析显示,“韧性”是建立在身份、联系、活动和保护之上的。“弹性物体”用于日常仪式,“弹性”是一种随着时间的推移,通过多重身份的居住而发展起来的特征。鉴于复原力与身份概念交织在一起,保健学院应增强学生的身份感,包括但不限于护理或助产专业身份,并邀请学生制定简单的仪式来应对保健工作的挑战。原创性/价值据作者所知,这是第一个将卫生保健学生的弹性定位于特定物质对象的研究。新颖的见解是,卫生保健专业的学生使用日常仪式和日常物品与他们的目的感联系起来,并管理他们的情绪,作为恢复活力的手段。
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Connections, rituals and identities: healthcare students’ descriptions of objects that represent resilience
Purpose Health-care student resilience is a well-researched topic, although the concept continues to evolve, not least as “resilience-building” has become an expected feature of health-care student professional education. The study aimed to understand the concept of resilience from the point of view of student nurses and midwives. Design/methodology/approach The study used a novel arts-informed method, informed by Miller’s and Turkle’s work on “evocative objects.” A total of 25 student nurses and midwives from a London-based university selected “resilience objects” which were photographed and discussed during interviews with an artist-researcher. Findings Analysis of the interviews revealed that “resilience” was founded on identity, connection, activity and protection. “Resilience objects” were used in everyday rituals and “resilience” was a characteristic that developed over time through the inhabiting of multiple identities. Practical implications Given that resilience is intertwined with notions of identity, health-care faculties should enhance students’ sense of identity, including, but not exclusively, nursing or midwifery professional identity, and invite students to develop simple rituals to cope with the challenges of health-care work. Originality/value To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study to locate health-care students’ resilience in specific material objects. Novel insights are that health-care students used everyday rituals and everyday objects to connect to their sense of purpose and manage their emotions, as means of being resilient.
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