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A relationship between the ethics of care and M?ori worldview—the place of relationality and care in Maori mental health service provision

A relationship between the ethics of care and M?ori worldview—the place of relationality and care in Maori mental health service provision
A relationship between the ethics of care and M?ori worldview—the place of relationality and care in Maori mental health service provision
This short practice article draws on a small empirical study of M?ori mental health nurses who work in mainstream and specialist cultural services. Emphasis on relationality in the M?ori worldview places people at the heart of caring and resonates with the care principles of Tronto's integrity of care. Personal motivations for caring as well as tribal expectations of providing care and protecting integrity and respect for the person, even when taking guardianship roles formed an explicit basis for care in the social welfare of ewpopel with mental health problems and their families.
ethics of care, relationality, maori values
1749-6535
410-422
Brannelly, Tula
c37a8667-d2f6-4455-ba06-cb8bb1637d6a
Boulton, Amohia
311b8b96-4b8e-44c6-b4fd-ac8ae1d4583b
te Hiini, Allie
41394a5d-eb35-4bec-a4b5-47f7e581340e
Brannelly, Tula
c37a8667-d2f6-4455-ba06-cb8bb1637d6a
Boulton, Amohia
311b8b96-4b8e-44c6-b4fd-ac8ae1d4583b
te Hiini, Allie
41394a5d-eb35-4bec-a4b5-47f7e581340e

Brannelly, Tula, Boulton, Amohia and te Hiini, Allie (2013) A relationship between the ethics of care and M?ori worldview—the place of relationality and care in Maori mental health service provision. Ethics and Social Welfare, 7 (4), 410-422. (doi:10.1080/17496535.2013.764001).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This short practice article draws on a small empirical study of M?ori mental health nurses who work in mainstream and specialist cultural services. Emphasis on relationality in the M?ori worldview places people at the heart of caring and resonates with the care principles of Tronto's integrity of care. Personal motivations for caring as well as tribal expectations of providing care and protecting integrity and respect for the person, even when taking guardianship roles formed an explicit basis for care in the social welfare of ewpopel with mental health problems and their families.

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More information

Published date: 13 March 2013
Keywords: ethics of care, relationality, maori values
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences, Researcher Development

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 389525
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/389525
ISSN: 1749-6535
PURE UUID: 505c2e23-c410-447a-88fb-2a15847e0f95

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Date deposited: 08 Mar 2016 15:04
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 23:04

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Contributors

Author: Tula Brannelly
Author: Amohia Boulton
Author: Allie te Hiini

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