Literature DB >> 11575059

It isn't something to yodel about, but it exists! Faeces, nurses, social relations and status within a mental hospital.

E van Dongen1.   

Abstract

In medical settings, emotion-provoking work creates a hierarchy among health care professionals. "Lower" emotions like disgust, contempt or aversion that are evoked by "body work" with elderly patients often remain invisible, but they play an important role in morality and shape the social relations between the patients and the professionals. With the help of ethnographic data from the nursing wards of a mental hospital, the author shows how feelings about excrement are determined not only by their nature, but also by the nature of the relationships among the nurses and the relationships between the nurses and the elderly patients. Body care and the emotions that are evoked are connected to morality and moral care. Dealing with bodily and moral "dirt" gives nurses a special position within the hospital as a whole, which will have effects on the care for elderly.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11575059     DOI: 10.1080/13607860120064952

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Aging Ment Health        ISSN: 1360-7863            Impact factor:   3.658


  3 in total

1.  Found in feces: differential diagnosis, workup, and treatment.

Authors:  Theodore A Stern; J Carl Pallais; Jeremiah M Scharf; Steven C Schlozman
Journal:  Prim Care Companion CNS Disord       Date:  2012-06-21

2.  Exploring residential care aide experiences with oral malodour in long-term care.

Authors:  Charanpreet Singh Dhami; Leeann R Donnelly
Journal:  Nurs Open       Date:  2020-05-12

3.  When care situations evoke difficult emotions in nursing staff members: an ethnographic study in two Norwegian nursing homes.

Authors:  Anne Marie Sandvoll; Ellen Karine Grov; Kjell Kristoffersen; Solveig Hauge
Journal:  BMC Nurs       Date:  2015-07-30
  3 in total

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