Literature DB >> 15614267

The experience of marginalization in new nursing graduates.

Judy E Boychuk Duchscher1, Leanne S Cowin.   

Abstract

This article discusses the conceptual history of marginalization, suggesting its use as a framework within which to understand some of the causal relationships between the high rate of attrition of new nursing graduates from professional nursing and the difficulties incurred during their transition from student to professionally practicing nurse. The application of marginalization in this article focuses on the vulnerability and alienation that these newly graduated nurses experience during their introduction to acute-care practice. The article further suggests that they are both inadequately prepared by their undergraduate education to enter into the full scope of their new role as professional practitioners, and ineffectually orientated to an oppressive workplace culture that they are expected to sustain.

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15614267     DOI: 10.1016/j.outlook.2004.06.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nurs Outlook        ISSN: 0029-6554            Impact factor:   3.250


  3 in total

1.  Entry into nursing: an ethnographic study of newly qualified nurses taking on the nursing role in a hospital setting.

Authors:  Mari Skancke Bjerknes; Ida Torunn Bjørk
Journal:  Nurs Res Pract       Date:  2012-09-24

2.  Dichotomy between theory and practice in chest radiography and its impact on students.

Authors:  Benard O Botwe; Lawrence Arthur; Michael K K Tenkorang; Samuel Anim-Sampong
Journal:  J Med Radiat Sci       Date:  2016-06-11

3.  Novice nurses' transition to the clinical setting in the COVID-19 pandemic: A phenomenological hermeneutic study.

Authors:  Sara Fernández-Basanta; Carmen Espremáns-Cidón; María-Jesús Movilla-Fernández
Journal:  Collegian       Date:  2022-04-11       Impact factor: 1.807

  3 in total

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