Aim And Objectives: To examine empirically and in-depth how discriminatory attitudes and practices are experienced by overseas nurses and how the discrimination may affect their well-being and career progression and, furthermore, to apply the theoretical perspective of embodiment in understanding these processes.

Background: The UK healthcare sector has, in recent years, relied on overseas-trained professionals to fill up vacancies in nursing and other professions. Research shows that overseas nurses claim that their UK colleagues, managers and patients express discriminatory, racist and xenophobic attitudes.

Design And Method: The paper provides an existential phenomenological analysis of in-depth interviews with two overseas nurses. The data are drawn from a study of overseas-trained healthcare workers' experiences working and living in the UK. The two cases have been purposively selected to provide an illumination and discussion of personal experiences with discrimination, how individuals may respond to these and how their professional career is affected.

Findings: Discrimination towards migrant workers may, at times, be experienced as 'blatant racism' or, in more subtle forms, as 'aversive racism'. It is demonstrated how such discrimination may impact on the afflicted person's sense of self, suggesting a theoretical model of the embodiment of discrimination. Discrimination not only works at an interpersonal and institutional level, but is a form of 'symbolic violence' that may be internalized to affect the person's 'habitus'; it can be resisted through meaning-making activity that explains and hence objectifies and embodies the experience in a way that allows individuals to positively influence their situation through agency.

Conclusion: This article details how social and institutionalized discrimination in the UK healthcare sector may be internalized by overseas workers and affects their professional careers.

Relevance To Clinical Practice: The study allows a theoretical reflection on the damage inflicted by discrimination, and it may contribute to the eradication of discriminatory practices and the development of necessary support and monitoring mechanisms.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2702.2007.02017.xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

overseas nurses
12
embodiment discrimination
8
career progression
8
discrimination
8
healthcare sector
8
overseas
5
discrimination overseas
4
overseas nurses'
4
nurses' career
4
progression aim
4

Similar Publications

Background: Many countries have addressed the global issue of nursing shortage by recruiting overseas nurses who are also qualified in the host country. Nevertheless, such nurses may encounter various obstacles in their personal and professional lives in the host country, leading to apprehensions about their perceptions of workplace safety in healthcare organisations.

Objective: This study investigated the current state of immigration-specific stress among overseas qualified nurses (OQNs) working in Japan and its impact on safety attitudes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Importance: Since 2001, 3.5 million United States service members deployed overseas in support of the post-9711 Global War on Terror. While healthy and fit upon deployment, veterans have experienced many complex and often unexplainable illnesses and chronic diseases, with more than 520 000 being diagnosed with cancer.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

User Experience Study of the Patient Monitoring Systems Based on Usability Testing and Eye Tracking.

Healthcare (Basel)

December 2024

Department of Medical Device Engineering and Management, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul 06229, Republic of Korea.

Background/objectives: The patient monitoring system is a critical tool commonly used in hospitals, making it essential to assess caregivers' user requirements and satisfaction with its usability. In intensive care units (ICUs), the usability of these systems is closely linked to the work efficiency of key users, such as nurses, and directly impacts patient safety and treatment outcomes. This study evaluates the usability of patient monitoring systems in intensive care units (ICUs), focusing on user requirements and satisfaction among nurses, the primary users.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • This study highlights the importance of cultural competency among nurses in women's hospitals during pregnancy and childbirth, focusing on the influence of multicultural attitudes and communication skills.
  • A cross-sectional study involving 150 nurses in South Korea was conducted using various self-report questionnaires to assess different aspects of cultural competency.
  • The findings showed that multicultural attitudes and intercultural communicative competency significantly contribute to cultural competency, suggesting that improving these areas is crucial for better nursing care in diverse populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

, Executive Director of Professional Practice, Nursing and Midwifery Council, reports on research that explored the views and experiences of overseas nurses with advanced practice qualifications working in the UK.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!