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Social science & medicine (1982). 2023 Dec:339:116364. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116364 Q15.02025

Employee perceptions of race and racism in an Australian hospital

澳大利亚医院员工对种族和种族主义的认识 翻译改进

Ieta D'Costa  1, Mandy Truong  2, Lynette Russell  3, Karen Adams  4

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作者单位

  • 1 School of Medicine, Nursing and Health Science, Monash University, Clayton, Melbourne, Australia. Electronic address: Ieta.Dcosta@monash.edu.
  • 2 Monash Nursing and Midwifery, Adjunct Research Fellow, Monash University, Clayton, Melbourne, Australia. Electronic address: Mandy.Truong@monash.edu.
  • 3 Monash Indigenous Studies Centre, School of Philosophical, Historical, and International Studies, Monash University, Clayton, Melbourne, Australia. Electronic address: Lynette.Russell@monash.edu.
  • 4 Indigenous Health Unit, School of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, Melbourne, Australia. Electronic address: Karen.Adams@monash.edu.
  • DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116364 PMID: 37977016

    摘要 Ai翻译

    Background: Racism contributes to health inequities faced by people of colour and marginalised groups. Despite widespread recognition of the impacts of racism, mitigating strategies and legislation have been largely unsuccessful. Research into racism in healthcare has mostly examined personal experiences of healthcare workers and patients, assuming that the definitions of racism and race are similarly understood by all. However, ethnicity and race are often conflated, and racism seen as primarily interpersonal and ahistorical.

    Purpose: This paper explores hospital employee understandings of racism, its impacts and how to reduce it.

    Methods: Forty-nine staff within one Australian hospital participated in individual qualitative interviews regarding the definition, impact, and ways of reducing racism. Interviews were analysed with a reflexive thematic analytic approach using a Postcolonial framework.

    Results: Participants described racism as being experienced by marginalised groups of people in Australia. They identified that racism has detrimental effects on health and wellbeing. Not all were clear regarding what constituted racism: it was not described as an ideology created to justify colonial distribution of power and resources. Some thought that racism was individual prejudice while others noted it was also structural in nature. Participants commonly defined race as involving physical or cultural differences, suggesting that discredited historical and colonial concepts of race continue in Australian society. While many felt that education was the best way to reduce racism and its impacts, some participants noted that being educated did not necessarily change racist behaviour.

    Conclusions: The lack of accurate understanding of the concept of race and racism likely contributes to the relatively poor effect of current strategies to combat racism. As an initial part of deeper systemic anti-racist reform, this research supports calls for anti-racist education to clarify the definition of racism as an ideology.

    Keywords: Health inequity; Hospital employees; Race; Racism.

    Keywords:employee perceptions; racial discrimination; healthcare environment

    Copyright © Social science & medicine (1982). 中文内容为AI机器翻译,仅供参考!

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    期刊名:Social science & medicine

    缩写:SOC SCI MED

    ISSN:0277-9536

    e-ISSN:1873-5347

    IF/分区:5.0/Q1

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    Employee perceptions of race and racism in an Australian hospital