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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12630-020-01643-2 | DOI Listing |
Can Rev Sociol
September 2024
Department of Sociology, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, Canada.
Religion is an omnipresent concern for the Iranian community residing in the Greater Toronto Area and York Region (GTA and YR). While the experience of Islamophobia appears to be a unidirectional attitude from the host onto the diasporic community, this research indicates the complexities of Canada's Muslim experience. According to this research, the Iranian Diasporas present an ingroup Islamophobia by expressing anger and hostility toward Iranian Muslim community members.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntensive Care Med
July 2023
Department of Biomedical Sciences, Humanitas University, Pieve Emanuele, Milan, Italy.
Sci Rep
May 2023
Education Program in Anatomy, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
The COVID-19 pandemic forced many universities and colleges to rapidly adopt online course delivery. As with any new foray, realizing the optimal aspects of a course to change became incredibly important for course instructors. In this study, we used a particularly sensitive method, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Soc Determinants Health Health Serv
January 2024
Newcomer Centre of Peel, Mississauga, ON, Canada.
Few researchers have explored Canadian migrants' experiences of mental health and service access. We interviewed 10 migrants to Canada from a local settlement organization about mental health and services and 5 organization staff about their experiences supporting migrants' mental health and service access. Our interviews with migrants revealed cultural perceptions of mental health and unmet service needs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoc Sci Med
March 2023
School of Health Studies, The University of Western Ontario, 1151 Huron Drive, London, ON N6A 2K5, Canada.
As a term used in nursing and other health professions to describe when one is prevented by institutional constraints from pursuing the right course of action, moral distress has gained traction to examine the effects of restructuring on health and social care providers. Using a critical narrative methodology, this paper presents the counter-stories of nine pediatric oncology nurses in Ontario, Canada, whose stories illustrate the embeddedness of their caregiving and moral distress within institutional contexts that leave them stretched thin amongst multiple caregiving and administrative demands, and that limit their capacities to be the nurses they want to be. Informed by feminist philosophical theorizations of moral distress, we elucidate how the nurses' counter-stories: (i) re-locate the sources of their moral distress within institutional constraints that fracture their moral identities and moral relationships, and (ii) dis-locate dominant narratives of technological cure by ascribing value and meaning to the relational care through which they sustain moral responsibilities with patients and their families.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!