3.8 Article

Maori and Tauiwi nurses' perspectives of anti-racism praxis: findings from a qualitative pilot study

Journal

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1177180120974673

Keywords

nursing; Aotearoa; health inequities; anti-racism; focus groups; Indigenous

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Funding

  1. Faculty of Health and Environmental Studies, Auckland University of Technology

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This pilot study explored Maori (Indigenous peoples of Aotearoa (New Zealand)) and Tauiwi (non-Maori) nurses' perspectives of anti-racism. A critical qualitative design was utilised, informed by kaupapa Maori (Maori philosophical approaches). Senior nurses with more than 7 years experience were recruited for focus groups. Two focus groups, one Maori (n = 5) and one Tauiwi (n = 4), were conducted September 2019 in Auckland. Data were analysed using the framework of a continuum of praxis which included themes of (a) problematic or racist, (b) variable and (c) proactive or anti-racism. Problematic praxis included examples of racism and White fragility. Variable praxis included Maori language and commitment to professional development. Proactive praxis included Maori workforce and reflexivity. These overarching themes illustrate a broad spectrum of anti-racism praxis within nursing. This continuum illustrated with examples is a potentially useful tool to assess and build proactive anti-racism praxis in nursing.

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