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Space and place in the construction and performance of gendered nursing identities

Space and place in the construction and performance of gendered nursing identities
Space and place in the construction and performance of gendered nursing identities
Background and aims: This paper draws on recent research conducted in two contrasting NHS hospitals: one a large District General, the other a small Community hospital; to look at hospitals as organizational spaces. This includes both the physical environment as well as how these spaces are inhabited and used. This paper aims to explore the ways in which hospital spaces impact on the working lives of nurses.
Methods: The research employed two main methods. Two phases of round the clock non-participant observation were carried out within each hospital, one at the beginning of the research period and one at the end. This generated thick description of the diversity of spaces, as well as individuals' use of space. In addition, more than 50 in-depth unstructured interviews were conducted with both nurses and doctors.
Findings: Three aspects of the relationship between nurse and hospital spaces are considered. First, the degree of access that nurses have to the different hospital spaces is limited, and many are confined to the wards in which they work. The high proportion of female nurses working on wards means that there are marked gender differences in access to hospital spaces. There are also marked professional differences when nurses are compared to doctors who have much greater freedom to roam and there are differences in the amount of private space allocated to nurses and doctors. Second, styles of bodily movement in space are also highly differentiated by profession and gender. Third, different spaces have very different meanings attached to them, and this has a strong impact on styles of performance and identity. Attention to space thus offers original insights to nurses working conditions as well as to inter-professional relations.
space, place, identity, organizations, gender, profession, access, bodily movement, performance
0309-2402
201-208
Halford, Susan
0d0fe4d6-3c4b-4887-84bb-738cf3249d46
Leonard, Pauline
a2839090-eccc-4d84-ab63-c6a484c6d7c1
Halford, Susan
0d0fe4d6-3c4b-4887-84bb-738cf3249d46
Leonard, Pauline
a2839090-eccc-4d84-ab63-c6a484c6d7c1

Halford, Susan and Leonard, Pauline (2003) Space and place in the construction and performance of gendered nursing identities. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 42 (2), 201-208. (doi:10.1046/j.1365-2648.2003.02601.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background and aims: This paper draws on recent research conducted in two contrasting NHS hospitals: one a large District General, the other a small Community hospital; to look at hospitals as organizational spaces. This includes both the physical environment as well as how these spaces are inhabited and used. This paper aims to explore the ways in which hospital spaces impact on the working lives of nurses.
Methods: The research employed two main methods. Two phases of round the clock non-participant observation were carried out within each hospital, one at the beginning of the research period and one at the end. This generated thick description of the diversity of spaces, as well as individuals' use of space. In addition, more than 50 in-depth unstructured interviews were conducted with both nurses and doctors.
Findings: Three aspects of the relationship between nurse and hospital spaces are considered. First, the degree of access that nurses have to the different hospital spaces is limited, and many are confined to the wards in which they work. The high proportion of female nurses working on wards means that there are marked gender differences in access to hospital spaces. There are also marked professional differences when nurses are compared to doctors who have much greater freedom to roam and there are differences in the amount of private space allocated to nurses and doctors. Second, styles of bodily movement in space are also highly differentiated by profession and gender. Third, different spaces have very different meanings attached to them, and this has a strong impact on styles of performance and identity. Attention to space thus offers original insights to nurses working conditions as well as to inter-professional relations.

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More information

Published date: 2003
Additional Information: Experience before and throughout the nursing career
Keywords: space, place, identity, organizations, gender, profession, access, bodily movement, performance

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 33842
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/33842
ISSN: 0309-2402
PURE UUID: df5d7099-af82-416e-9513-7e92e3249809
ORCID for Pauline Leonard: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8112-0631

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Date deposited: 16 May 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:48

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Contributors

Author: Susan Halford
Author: Pauline Leonard ORCID iD

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