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"Everything Possible Is Being Done": Labour, Mobility, and the Organization of Health Services in Mid-20 Century Newfoundland. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The article discusses the organization of nursing services in Newfoundland during the 1950s and 1960s, focusing on recruitment and retention in outport communities.
  • The Newfoundland government employed various strategies like recruiting internationally educated nurses, adjusting registration standards, and utilizing both trained and untrained personnel to address staffing challenges.
  • The findings serve as a case study not only for Newfoundland and Labrador but also raise questions about the applicability of these strategies to other rural or remote areas across Canada.

Article Abstract

This article is the Presidential Address to the 2018 meeting of the Canadian Society for the History of Medicine at the University of Regina. It examines the organization of the nursing service in Newfoundland during the 1950s and 1960s, as well as the recruitment and retention of nurses in cottage hospitals and nursing stations in outport communities. A number of interconnected strategies were used by the Newfoundland government to staff the nursing service, including recruiting internationally educated nurses, adjusting expectations with respect to registration standards, and using both trained and untrained workers to support nurses' labour. Although this article is intended more as a reconnaissance suggesting the possibilities of such research, it does analyze the interconnected issues of geography, funding and pay, the nursing shortage, and the renegotiation of nursing labour that characterized this period. Furthermore, although this is a case study of Newfoundland and Labrador, it is worth considering how, or whether, the linked strategies used in the province were transferable to other communities across rural, remote, or northern Canada.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cbmh.286-092018DOI Listing

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