Gendered Nursing Education and Practice in Iran

Through qualitative ethnographic methods, the researcher explored gendered nursing education and practice among Iranian nursing students and faculty. Interaction with nursing students and faculty occurred in a familiar turf using the native language in interviews and on field observations. Settings...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of transcultural nursing 2003-01, Vol.14 (1), p.32-38
1. Verfasser: Fooladi, Marjaneh M.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Through qualitative ethnographic methods, the researcher explored gendered nursing education and practice among Iranian nursing students and faculty. Interaction with nursing students and faculty occurred in a familiar turf using the native language in interviews and on field observations. Settings included classrooms, skills laboratory, faculty offices, clinical areas, and informants' homes. Formal and informal interviews, observations, and printed materials provided useful data to reach consistent common patterns. Thematic analysis and triangulation of data identified gender variations in care and compassion, spirituality, economic motives, and practice preference. Integrated experiences of pre-Islamic period were used to describe the current developments of gendered nursing education and practice in the Islamic Republic of Iran. Study of gendered nursing education and practice brings attention to the cultural significance of gender issues. This body of knowledge will benefit American nurses and educators by increasing their cultural understanding of gender.
ISSN:1043-6596
1552-7832
DOI:10.1177/1043659602238348