How spirituality shapes the practice of community health nurses who work in First Nations communities in British Columbia

In recent years nursing literature has featured a proliferation of discourse pertaining to many aspects of spirituality in nursing. However, there has been a dearth of research related to nurses' personal spirituality and whether or not it helps to shape their nursing practice. This qualitative...

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Main Author: McColgan, Karen Annette
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2516
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spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:BVAU./2516 2023-05-15T16:15:02+02:00 How spirituality shapes the practice of community health nurses who work in First Nations communities in British Columbia McColgan, Karen Annette 2008-10-09T17:54:54Z 5878270 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2516 eng eng University of British Columbia http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2516 Health practice First Nations Spirituality nurses Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2008 ftcanadathes 2013-11-23T21:52:24Z In recent years nursing literature has featured a proliferation of discourse pertaining to many aspects of spirituality in nursing. However, there has been a dearth of research related to nurses' personal spirituality and whether or not it helps to shape their nursing practice. This qualitative study explored how spirituality shapes the practice of community health nurses who work in First Nations communities in British Columbia (B.C.). The twelve participants, purposefully sampled, all had at least 2 years experience working in community health in First Nations communities. Using an interpretive descriptive research design, participants were interviewed to explore their lived experiences of spirituality relative to their nursing practice. The analysis of the interview data identified that nurses' spirituality is essential to their practice in terms of "providing care spiritually" versus "providing spiritual care" interventions to their patients as typically depicted in the nursing literature. Moreover, their spirituality is discussed as a pervasive nursing ethic and motivation for patient care that manifests as respect, connectedness, love, acceptance, caring, hope, endurance and compassion towards patients. Furthermore, the findings of this study suggest the integration of community health nurses' spirituality into their nursing practice may contribute to the wider aim of health and healing within First Nations communities. Four major themes are presented as research findings: (a) spirituality influences nurses' ability to remain self aware, open-minded and accepting in relation to others; (b) spirituality as a reflexive approach to grounding one's own nursing practice; (c) spiritual awareness fosters appreciation of the need for community healing, and finally (d) self-reflection and providing care spiritually as a route to reciprocal interaction. Also, it was identified that nurses' spirituality nurtures their reflexivity and helps them to: (a) foster culturally safe relationships with patients, (b) realize how colonial issues influence health status in First Nations patients, (c) recognize that cumulative work stress and burn out can be reduced and prevented through relational spiritual practices, and (d) work through their own values, beliefs and prejudices in order to practice nursing based on a model of reciprocal interaction, and culturally safe approaches. Thesis First Nations Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
institution Open Polar
collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
op_collection_id ftcanadathes
language English
topic Health practice First Nations
Spirituality nurses
spellingShingle Health practice First Nations
Spirituality nurses
McColgan, Karen Annette
How spirituality shapes the practice of community health nurses who work in First Nations communities in British Columbia
topic_facet Health practice First Nations
Spirituality nurses
description In recent years nursing literature has featured a proliferation of discourse pertaining to many aspects of spirituality in nursing. However, there has been a dearth of research related to nurses' personal spirituality and whether or not it helps to shape their nursing practice. This qualitative study explored how spirituality shapes the practice of community health nurses who work in First Nations communities in British Columbia (B.C.). The twelve participants, purposefully sampled, all had at least 2 years experience working in community health in First Nations communities. Using an interpretive descriptive research design, participants were interviewed to explore their lived experiences of spirituality relative to their nursing practice. The analysis of the interview data identified that nurses' spirituality is essential to their practice in terms of "providing care spiritually" versus "providing spiritual care" interventions to their patients as typically depicted in the nursing literature. Moreover, their spirituality is discussed as a pervasive nursing ethic and motivation for patient care that manifests as respect, connectedness, love, acceptance, caring, hope, endurance and compassion towards patients. Furthermore, the findings of this study suggest the integration of community health nurses' spirituality into their nursing practice may contribute to the wider aim of health and healing within First Nations communities. Four major themes are presented as research findings: (a) spirituality influences nurses' ability to remain self aware, open-minded and accepting in relation to others; (b) spirituality as a reflexive approach to grounding one's own nursing practice; (c) spiritual awareness fosters appreciation of the need for community healing, and finally (d) self-reflection and providing care spiritually as a route to reciprocal interaction. Also, it was identified that nurses' spirituality nurtures their reflexivity and helps them to: (a) foster culturally safe relationships with patients, (b) realize how colonial issues influence health status in First Nations patients, (c) recognize that cumulative work stress and burn out can be reduced and prevented through relational spiritual practices, and (d) work through their own values, beliefs and prejudices in order to practice nursing based on a model of reciprocal interaction, and culturally safe approaches.
format Thesis
author McColgan, Karen Annette
author_facet McColgan, Karen Annette
author_sort McColgan, Karen Annette
title How spirituality shapes the practice of community health nurses who work in First Nations communities in British Columbia
title_short How spirituality shapes the practice of community health nurses who work in First Nations communities in British Columbia
title_full How spirituality shapes the practice of community health nurses who work in First Nations communities in British Columbia
title_fullStr How spirituality shapes the practice of community health nurses who work in First Nations communities in British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed How spirituality shapes the practice of community health nurses who work in First Nations communities in British Columbia
title_sort how spirituality shapes the practice of community health nurses who work in first nations communities in british columbia
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2516
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2516
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