An ethnographic study examining quality of worklife issues of outpost nurses in northern Manitoba

An ethnographic study was implemented to examine quality of worklife (QWL) issues of outpost nurses in northern Manitoba. Fieldnotes were maintained during a ten day field experience to four outpost stations in northern Manitoba in 1994. One to two hour semi-structured interviews were conducted with...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Martin, Donna E.
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1131
id ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/1131
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/1131 2023-06-18T03:40:39+02:00 An ethnographic study examining quality of worklife issues of outpost nurses in northern Manitoba Martin, Donna E. 1997-03-01T00:00:00Z 18200699 bytes 184 bytes application/pdf text/plain http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1131 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1131 open access master thesis 1997 ftunivmanitoba 2023-06-04T17:46:24Z An ethnographic study was implemented to examine quality of worklife (QWL) issues of outpost nurses in northern Manitoba. Fieldnotes were maintained during a ten day field experience to four outpost stations in northern Manitoba in 1994. One to two hour semi-structured interviews were conducted with 5 Aboriginal and 6 Non-Aboriginal outpost nurses. Transcripts and fieldnotes underwent content analysis to identify categories and themes. Findings indicated that outpost nursing was inundated with contradictions and conflicts. Outpost nurses perceived that positive worklife factors outweighed the negative ones. They found personal fulfillment in several aspects of their work. Fulfillment was a major theme comprising the following worklife categories: (1) attachment to clients; (2) learning on the job; (3) independence; (4) we do everything; (5) being the doctor; (6) variety of patient needs; and (7) providing quality care. Independence was the most significant positive worklife factor. Worklife issues that outpost nurses perceived negatively reflected a self image of powerlessness, which contained the following categories: (1) isolation; (2) working and living together; (3) inadequate preparation; (4) clients' dependence on the system; (5) massive responsibility; (6) understaffing; (7) never really off; (8) living in fear; (9) lack of support from Zone Nursing Officers; (10) conflicts with physicians; and (11) "it's very political up here." "It's very political up here," understaffing, working and living together were worklife factors that nurses perceived to strongly negatively affect their worklife. Aboriginal nurses expressed that their knowledge of First Nations language and culture enhanced their practice. Non-Aboriginal outpost nurses demonstrated scepticism over authenticity of clients' health problems. Aboriginal nurses spoke about a long-term commitment to outpost nursing; Non-Aboriginal nurses viewed outpost nursing as a short-term experience. Aboriginal nurses participated in group and community ... Master Thesis First Nations MSpace at the University of Manitoba
institution Open Polar
collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
language English
description An ethnographic study was implemented to examine quality of worklife (QWL) issues of outpost nurses in northern Manitoba. Fieldnotes were maintained during a ten day field experience to four outpost stations in northern Manitoba in 1994. One to two hour semi-structured interviews were conducted with 5 Aboriginal and 6 Non-Aboriginal outpost nurses. Transcripts and fieldnotes underwent content analysis to identify categories and themes. Findings indicated that outpost nursing was inundated with contradictions and conflicts. Outpost nurses perceived that positive worklife factors outweighed the negative ones. They found personal fulfillment in several aspects of their work. Fulfillment was a major theme comprising the following worklife categories: (1) attachment to clients; (2) learning on the job; (3) independence; (4) we do everything; (5) being the doctor; (6) variety of patient needs; and (7) providing quality care. Independence was the most significant positive worklife factor. Worklife issues that outpost nurses perceived negatively reflected a self image of powerlessness, which contained the following categories: (1) isolation; (2) working and living together; (3) inadequate preparation; (4) clients' dependence on the system; (5) massive responsibility; (6) understaffing; (7) never really off; (8) living in fear; (9) lack of support from Zone Nursing Officers; (10) conflicts with physicians; and (11) "it's very political up here." "It's very political up here," understaffing, working and living together were worklife factors that nurses perceived to strongly negatively affect their worklife. Aboriginal nurses expressed that their knowledge of First Nations language and culture enhanced their practice. Non-Aboriginal outpost nurses demonstrated scepticism over authenticity of clients' health problems. Aboriginal nurses spoke about a long-term commitment to outpost nursing; Non-Aboriginal nurses viewed outpost nursing as a short-term experience. Aboriginal nurses participated in group and community ...
format Master Thesis
author Martin, Donna E.
spellingShingle Martin, Donna E.
An ethnographic study examining quality of worklife issues of outpost nurses in northern Manitoba
author_facet Martin, Donna E.
author_sort Martin, Donna E.
title An ethnographic study examining quality of worklife issues of outpost nurses in northern Manitoba
title_short An ethnographic study examining quality of worklife issues of outpost nurses in northern Manitoba
title_full An ethnographic study examining quality of worklife issues of outpost nurses in northern Manitoba
title_fullStr An ethnographic study examining quality of worklife issues of outpost nurses in northern Manitoba
title_full_unstemmed An ethnographic study examining quality of worklife issues of outpost nurses in northern Manitoba
title_sort ethnographic study examining quality of worklife issues of outpost nurses in northern manitoba
publishDate 1997
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1131
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1131
op_rights open access
_version_ 1769005864239235072