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  1. But as a profession, nursing is a highly practical and well defined service role for delivering care to patients (Donaldson and Crowley 1978). Anthropology, even in its applied form, does not have a socially sanctioned (and therefore morally experienced) clinical, or service, mandate.

  2. Within cultural and medical anthropology, nursing was a field through which to understand broader cultural and societal values related to gender, care practices across cultures, and women's transnational labor migration.

  3. from the anthropological political role behavioral concepts of middle­ man, patron, and entrepreneur to investigate attitudes and beliefs about nursing behavior suggests that a critical paradox is emerging between the behavioral expression of nurses and professed institu­ tional ideologies.

  4. Several key concepts from anth:opology and specific areas of individual interpersonal behavior have particular relevance to nursing education. It is important, for instance, that nurses understand the culture of the hospital, clinic, or other health service setting in which they work.

  5. TLDR. A theoretical analysis of the ways in which structural factors intersect with the professional and social experiences of a group of nurse teachers in Bangladesh to discuss to what extent nursing education has been an empowering tool, and to analyse how the nurses’ socioeconomic background, personal experiences and life events have ...

  6. Anthropology's strengths in a school of nursing include its scientific and human­ istic approach to humanity, its repertoire of concepts to aid in analyzing patients' demands and resources in daily life, its wealth of ethnographic data that promotes

  7. 5 wrz 2018 · Within cultural and medical anthropology, nursing was a field through which to understand broader cultural and societal values related to gender, care practices across cultures, and women's ...

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