Forms of racism and discrimination in career progression in the NHS: Evidence from Ghanaian nurses and midwives Leroi Henry Department of Economics The.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Vanja Ivosevic Centre for Education Policy Becici, 24 April 2010 Mapping policies and practices for the preparation of teachers for inclusive education.
Advertisements

How to reach and engage with young people from black and minority ethnic groups who may require help from mental health services What needs to happen.
The trainee as participant observer Roy Wallworth.
Aspiration and Frustration A Brief Overview. mobilising business for good Aspiration and Frustration Research objective: To find out how certain industries.
3 High expectations for every child
Unions and Migration in the UK: Rights, Strategies and Dilemmas Dr Heather Connolly, DeMontfort University, Professor Miguel Martinez Lucio and Dr Stefania.
Caring. Carers Paid Social Carers: Staff who work with people in residential care homes, in day centres and who provide care in someone’s home Unpaid.
A Research Active Hospice
Constructing the Foundations of Capacity Building An Activity Theory Analysis of the English in Action Baseline Studies Jan Rae and Adrian Kirkwood.
Openings for Progression Dr Lindsay Hewitt. Bridges Programmes: Background Founded 2003 in response to the dispersal of asylum seekers to Glasgow and.
El Proyecto de Salud Indigena: A Culturally Competent Model for Working with Indigenous Mexican Migrants Rebecca J. Hester, Ph.D Post-Doctoral Research.
Dr Lynn Nichol Department of Business and Management University of Gloucestershire.
Exploration of Physiotherapists’ Motivations to Embark upon Taught Master's Level Study Peter Glover MSc BSc (Hons) & Dr Cathy Bulley PhD BSc (Hons)
Health Sciences and Practice Subject Centre Ethics Special Interest Group 24 th April 2009 Helen Allan, Pam Smith.
Social Studies Department Electives. Citizenship & Civics/ Law Education  Learn how your government and legal systems work.  Learn how your government.
The cultural context of care giving: South Asian carers’ experiences of caring for a child with developmental disorders. Kuljit Heer (PhD Researcher) Supervisors:
Ethical Challenges to Researching within a South Asian Context BY SANA RIZVI DOCTORAL RESEARCHER GRADUATE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL.
VOX POP Southern Health Empower. Engage. Support Case Study: Challenging stereotypes and assumptions Reducing the involvement of BME staff subject to Disciplinary.
Re-entry and Career Issues
The Leader’s role in retaining staff: A study of the decisions of early career nurses Describe the purposes of the project Present the findings, especially.
DEBUT Digital Experience Building in University Teaching
ESRC RES =0514 Overseas-trained South Asian doctors and the development of geriatric medicine Joanna Bornat, Leroi Henry and Parvati Raghuram.
Study as work: the role of 'training' in the lives of medical migrants to the UK Leroi Henry, Parvati Raghuram, Joanna Bornat 48th Congress of the European.
Assessing and Evaluating Learning
Developing, Implementing, and Evaluating Cultural Competency and Equality IN Nurse Training : What Are We Learning? Results From an Action Research Project.
Equality Impact Assessment Training. History Stephen Lawrence case The Macpherson Report Police Force ‘institutionally racist’ - policies, procedures,
Project Instrument Development funded by the National Science Foundation Paper Presented at the 2009 AERA Annual Meeting by: Dr. Mary Hobbs, P.I. and Amy.
National Frameworks of Qualifications, and the UK Experience Dr Robin Humphrey Director of Research Postgraduate Training Faculty of Humanities and Social.
Are Patients Admitted to the Virtual Ward Satisfied with the Intervention of the Community Matron in their Care Pathway? Geraldine Rodgers Dr. Maria Ponto.
Research, evidence and engaging learning Profiling the influence of school librarianship Penny Moore
Workshop: Museums and Intercultural Dialogue Chester Beatty Library, 4 April 2014 Museums as Places for Intercultural Dialogue and Learning Workshop Outline:
Tackling racial discrimination in the workplace Nicola Power & Verity Lewis.
Designing a culturally appropriate self-management intervention for primary breast cancer patients from different ethnic groups using ‘Experience Based.
Welcome Module 7 Valuing Diversity. Description Ensuring that Scouting is available to all and that diversity is valued.
Their Right, our Responsibility: Involving young people in their health care Health Improvement Specialist and You’re.
Teachers mentoring teachers: A process of reflection and rejuvenation
Strategy for Human Resource Management Lecture 17
NATT Conference – 7 th March 2011 Rehana Minhas Director of Equality- Education Leeds.
National Adult Literacy Agency, Ireland May 8th 2006
. Chapter 7 Women in Male Dominated Industries John Burgess, Lindy Henderson and Glenda Strachan Copyright  2010 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs to.
RELIGIOUS EDUCATION OTHER RELIGIOUS TRADITIONS. In the classroom we : Recognise, respond to and counter racial prejudice. Follow consistent procedures.
West Suffolk Hospitals NHS Trust Report on Confidential Survey of Employees 2003.
International care workers in England Shereen Hussein Jill Manthorpe Martin Stevens Social Care Workforce Research Unit King’s College London Photos from.
Irena Papadopoulos Professor of Transcultural Health and Nursing Middlesex University I. Papadopoulos, Middlesex University.
Potential Roles for Health Technology Assessment Agencies: Opportunities and Challenges for an Effective Health Technology Assessment Practice at the Meso.
Opportunities, Challenges, and Solutions within a Family-School Partnership Approach The Future of School Psychology Task Force on Family-School Partnerships.
Early Clinical Career Fellowships Supporting Fellows: The role of the Mentor and Board Lead Jane Ormerod – Head of Professional and Practice Development.
Able Nurses and Midwives Barbara Waters Ex CE Skill: National Bureau for Students with Disabilities UK.
Copyright 2012 Delmar, a part of Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 9 Improving Quality in Health Care Organizations.
1.Create inclusive organizational environments 2.Create accountability for diversity efforts (research lacking) 3.Leaders must be committed 4.Collect &
“Roma culture”, school education and teacher training Calin Rus Intercultural Institute Timisoara, Romania
The Kaleidoscope Group Proprietary and Confidential Diversity & Inclusion Audit Summary NLU Diversity & Inclusion Council January 18, 2007.
Results Background and objectives A cross-sectional study was conducted from January to April 2012 in Athens, Greece. The study population consisted of.
Kent, Surrey and Sussex Patient Safety Collaborative Pressure Damage is Everybody's Business A National Perspective Caroline Lecko Patient.
ITE session Involving refugee parents and communities.
Shaping the Future: A Vision for Learning Disability Nursing United Kingdom Learning Disability Consultant Nurse Network.
BBA 229 Training and Development
What has been delivered? The EACH Cultural Awareness Project – Sue Hay, Project Worker.
Diverse Teachers and Diverse Learners in Iceland Hanna Ragnarsdóttir and Hafdís Guðjónsdóttir School of Education, University of Iceland 1 ESRC Seminar.
Assessment Procedures for Counselors and Helping Professionals, 7e © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 16 Communicating Assessment.
Quality Teaching – The Need for a Common Framework Prof. John Stannard CBE FRSA Principal Consultant CfBT Education Trust.
Americana Subtitle Goes Here Guiding Social Studies Experiences.
Author: Zhenhui Rao Student: 范明麗 Olivia I D:
Business School Action for the career development of academic women Simonetta Manfredi, Centre for Diversity Policy Research Oxford Brookes University.
Making Diversity Interventions Count: Annual Conference 2016 Innov8 – Sheffield Mentoring Project DR MANREESH BAINS SENIOR CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGIST, PROJECT.
Poster 1. Leadership Development Programme : Leading Cultures of Research and Innovation in Clinical Teams Background The NHS Constitution is explicit.
Social and Cultural factors required to support progression
Information Literacy in the Workplace
Recognising and Rewarding Successful Teaching
Diversity Management Processes
Presentation transcript:

Forms of racism and discrimination in career progression in the NHS: Evidence from Ghanaian nurses and midwives Leroi Henry Department of Economics The Open University

Aims Explore and conceptualise discriminatory practices in career progression in the NHS Examine and contextualise how some responses to perceived racism entrench rather than resist marginalisation

The REOH Project: Background Researching Equal Opportunities for Overseas-trained Healthcare professionals Open University and University of Surrey Sponsored by European Social Fund Interviews with over 100 overseas-trained healthcare professionals Case study of Ghanaian trained healthcare professionals. Interviews with NHS Trust and clinical managers Interviews with local and national stakeholders

The REOH Project: Research Team Dr Helen Allan, EIHMS, University of Surrey Dr Leroi Henry, Economics, Open University Dr John Larsen, EIHMS, University of Surrey Professor Maureen Mackintosh, Economics, Open University Professor Pam Smith, EIHMS, University of Surrey

The REOH Project: Key areas of interest Accreditation and use of overseas skills and experiences The factors affecting career progression Relationships with colleagues and patients Adaptations to UK work environment Systems of social, economic and professional support Influence of relationships with countries of origin on careers

Methods Case study of Ghanaian trained healthcare professionals Conducted in London and South-east England Individual semi structured interviews and ethnographic research with the Ghanaian Diaspora. Informant led interviews focusing on their stated concerns

Selection of informants Participation in previous studies Contacts with Ghanaian community groups Activists in Ghanaian and other minority ethnic community and professional associations Case study visits to workplaces ‘Snowballing’ through the above routes Interviewing thirty healthcare professionals at the two largest hospitals in Ghana. Observation at Diaspora meetings

Characteristics of informants Thirty nurses and midwives Mostly F and G grade Most resident in the UK for over 15 years Mostly joint nationality Supplemented by more recent migrants and lower grades. Not representative of Ghanaian nurses in the UK

Background: Lack of transparency in promotion in the NHS Henry, L. (2006 forthcoming) Institutionalised disadvantage: Older Ghanaian nurses and midwives reflections on career progression and stagnation in the NHS, Journal of Clinical Nursing Special Issue

Background: Lack of transparency in promotion in the NHS Difficulties adapting to career progression initially attributed to socio- cultural differences Disadvantage entrenched and institutionalised by a lack of support In promotion into senior roles informants experienced differential access to training and opportunities to gain experience Discrimination in the quality of support given to candidates particularly interview preparation and feedback. Systems of patronage based on meeting subjective criteria rather than meritocratic.

Forms of discrimination in career progression within the NHS Discriminatory acts Discriminatory omissions Cultures of discrimination Marginalising oneself Narratives of discrimination

Marginalising oneself: becoming an agent in discrimination Response to racism and a form of discrimination In context of racism nurses balance careers with other commitments and interests Instrumental attitude towards professional life Withdraw from career development

Alienation leading to withdrawal from career progression Demoralisation after long periods of career stagnation Caused by endemic racial or ethnic discrimination Reinforced by a perception of a lack of support or interest from managers Avoiding humiliating processes ending in failure

Redefining success Withdrawal accompanied by a redefinition being a successful migrant Immediate family in the UK Dual identities: “Living here and there” Extended family Property and investments in Ghana Retirement and or returning to Ghana Return to migrants’ original aims

Being an agent in ones own marginalisation Trauma and frustration engendered by discrimination are internalised Victims seek to avoid exposing themselves to further humiliation Response to racism that reproduces the effects of discrimination through inhibiting career progression

Political implications of this analysis Not blaming these black professionals for their predicament Understandable response based on their original aims as migrants and current obligations Does not let the NHS off the hook for the discriminatory practices which provoked these responses Explains why withdrawal from career progression is common in some overseas trained staff

Narratives of discrimination Perception that ethnicism and racism are endemic not the substance of claims of discrimination Power lies in the ways that this perception affects responses to situations and relationships in the workplace

Narratives of discrimination Discriminatory practises conceptualised through a collective narrative of discrimination and exclusion Context: –lack of transparency in career progression –Few black and African nurses in senior positions Informants understand their relative lack of career success as a result of being Africans Africans at the bottom of a racial and ethnic hierarchy which largely determines ones status within the NHS

Narratives of discrimination as a lens Narrative can become a lens through which experiences in the workplace are interpreted Form of racism existing within the mind of the victim which affects responses in the workplace Most negative experiences are regarded as racism irrespective of alternative explanations In an environment lacking transparency, racism is easiest explanation for negative experiences

Narratives of discrimination Not questioning the validity of nurses claims of discrimination Not claiming that racism only exists in the mind

Collective narratives of discrimination and marginalisation Interpretations of shared experiences as discrimination become self sustaining Little evidence supporting alternative explanations Expectation of racism due to history of perceived racism Demoralised staff become marginalised Not adopted by all

Resisting racism through avoiding racialisation Discourses of successful black nurses and midwives Progression built upon not labelling every negative experience and incident as racist Various interpretations of this discourse

Limitations Current analysis only relates to Ghanaian nurses and midwives attempting promotion above grade F Some nurses have resisted these processes Demoralised nurses’ careers can be resurrected

Conclusions Overseas trained nurses experience a range of discriminatory practices that take three guises: –Discriminatory acts –Discriminatory omissions –Cultures of discrimination Responses to perceived racist or ethnic discrimination can intensify its effects through encouraging individual and possibly collective withdrawal from career progression