Bodily Burdens: Physical Abuse, Workplace Injury, and Understanding Intersectionality through the Experiences of African Immigrant Direct Care Health Workers

IF 1.6 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Y. Covington‐Ward
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This article uses Leith Mullings’s intersectional approach to health disparities combined with a novel focus on the impact of direct care jobs on workers’ bodies in order to illuminate the everyday experiences of African immigrant direct health care workers in the Greater Pittsburgh metropolitan area. The research for this article is based on thirty interviews with African immigrant direct care workers conducted in 2014. Specifically, by examining direct care workers’ experiences of being physically and verbally abused by patients, and by exploring the impact of extremely high rates of physical injury on the job, this article aims to show the bodily burdens, the physical embodied costs, that direct care workers bear and carry for the larger society related to caring for the elderly and cognitively and physically disabled patients. A focus on the body shows how American labor sectors, including direct care, are shaped by racialized and gendered social orders that immigrants must face after their arrival in the United States.
身体负担:身体虐待,工作场所伤害,并通过非洲移民直接护理卫生工作者的经验理解交叉性
这篇文章使用了Leith Mullings对健康差距的交叉方法,结合对直接护理工作对工人身体影响的新关注,以阐明大匹兹堡大都市地区非洲移民直接护理工作者的日常经历。本文的研究基于2014年对非洲移民直接护理工作者的30次采访。具体而言,通过调查直接护理人员受到患者身体和言语虐待的经历,并探索极高的身体伤害率对工作的影响,本文旨在展示身体负担、身体体现的成本,直接护理人员为更大的社会承担和承担的与照顾老年人和认知和身体残疾患者有关的责任。对该机构的关注表明,包括直接护理在内的美国劳工部门是如何受到移民抵达美国后必须面对的种族化和性别化社会秩序的影响的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
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