“我想要五个”:德国医疗保健部门国际招聘护士的种族化和商品化。

IF 2.2 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
Frontiers in Sociology Pub Date : 2025-08-13 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fsoc.2025.1646906
Tanja Gangarova, Johanna Kechout, Hans Vogt
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引用次数: 0

摘要

虽然在北美和澳大利亚背景下的研究表明,在医疗保健中遇到种族主义是多么繁重,但种族主义对欧洲医疗保健互动的影响,特别是在德国,仍未得到充分探讨。本文借鉴了一项研究,该研究考察了德国国际招聘护士和融合管理人员的职业经历中人际、制度和结构性种族主义的交叉点,这些人自认为“受种族主义影响”。其目的是加深我们的形式,动态和影响的种族主义的医疗保健部门日益形成经济化的理解。采用探索性质的研究设计,该研究基于21个半结构化访谈和10个参与者日记。数据分析遵循一个迭代过程,在定性内容分析的框架内整合归纳和演绎方法,并强调研究参与者的观点。本文开发的分析框架解决了种族化和商品化的相互交织的过程,并有助于对招聘护士在护理环境中的种族主义经历进行经验基础的概念理解。这种方法方法揭示了微妙的机制,通过种族不平等产生(再)和方式招聘劳动力是商品化在德国医疗保健背景下。研究结果表明,这些动态不仅损害了国际招聘的护士,而且还导致该部门内种族主义的隐形化。此外,该分析还提供了跨国医疗保健工作中种族化劳动关系和护理流失全球动态的细致入微的说明。在此过程中,该文件确定了制度变革和转型的关键领域,并强调了必须解决的更广泛的权力结构,以促进护理领域的公平和正义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
"I'd like five of them": the racialization and commodification of internationally recruited nurses in the German healthcare sector.

While research in North American and Australian contexts demonstrates how encountering racism in healthcare is burdensome, the impact of racism on healthcare interactions in Europe, and particularly in Germany, remains underexplored. This paper draws on a study that examines the intersections of interpersonal, institutional, and structural racism in the professional experiences of internationally recruited nurses and integration managers in Germany who self-identify as "affected by racism." The aim is to deepen our understanding of the forms, dynamics, and effects of racism within a healthcare sector increasingly shaped by economization. Employing an exploratory qualitative research design, the study is based on 21 semi-structured interviews and 10 participant diaries. Data analysis followed an iterative process, integrating inductive and deductive approaches within a framework of qualitative content analysis and emphasizing study participants' perspectives. The analytical framework developed in this paper addresses the intertwined processes of racialization and commodification and contributes to an empirically grounded conceptual understanding of recruited nurses' experiences of racism within nursing settings. This methodological approach reveals the subtle mechanisms through which racial inequalities are (re)produced and the ways that recruited labor is commodified in the German healthcare context. Findings suggest that these dynamics not only harm internationally recruited nurses, but also contribute to the invisibilization of racism within the sector. Furthermore, the analysis provides a nuanced account of racialized labor relations in transnational healthcare work and the global dynamics of care drain. In doing so, the paper identifies critical areas for institutional change and transformation, and it underscores the broader power structures that must be addressed in order to advance equity and justice in nursing.

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来源期刊
Frontiers in Sociology
Frontiers in Sociology Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
4.00%
发文量
198
审稿时长
14 weeks
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