Public Health Nurses and Mothers Challenge and Shift the Meaning of Health Outcomes
Author(s) -
Megan Aston,
Josephine Etowa,
Sheri Price,
Adele Vukic,
Christine Hart,
Emily MacLeod,
Patricia Randel
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
global qualitative nursing research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.073
H-Index - 12
ISSN - 2333-3936
DOI - 10.1177/2333393616632126
Subject(s) - nova scotia , empowerment , public health , qualitative research , nursing , meaning (existential) , public health nursing , power (physics) , work (physics) , psychology , sociology , gender studies , medicine , political science , social science , psychotherapist , mechanical engineering , ethnology , physics , quantum mechanics , law , engineering
Maternal, child, and newborn health is a priority area in Canada and around the world. The work of public health nurses (PHNs) is often invisible and misunderstood. The purpose of this qualitative research project was to explore how universal and targeted home visiting programs for mothers and babies were organized, delivered, and experienced through the everyday practices of PHNs ( n = 16) and mothers ( n = 16) in Nova Scotia, Canada. Feminist poststructuralism and discourse analysis were used to analyze interviews. Concepts of relations of power enabled an understanding of how health outcomes had been socially and institutionally constructed through binary relations. PHNs and mothers spoke about the importance of “softer” health outcomes, including maternal self-confidence and empowerment that had been constructed as less important than health outcomes that were seen to be more tangible and physical. Findings from this research could be used to guide practice and planning of postpartum home visiting programs
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