School of Nursing
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This collection contains Honours, Masters and Ph.D by coursework theses from University of Adelaide postgraduate students within the School of Nursing. The material has been approved as making a significant contribution to knowledge.
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Browsing School of Nursing by Author "Coombe, Brigid Ann"
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Item Open Access "It's busy .... but I love it": the experience of nurses providing abortion care in a specialist setting.(2013) Coombe, Brigid Ann; Cusack, Lynette; Hetzel, Sue; School of NursingAim: This is a report of a study to understand the subjective experience of nurses whose role it is to provide nursing care for women seeking abortion services in a specialist clinic. Background: Abortion is a very commonly provided health service in Australia but remains morally and politically controversial and associated with judgment and stigma. Nurses are integral to the provision of abortion services for women. Research attention to the subjective experience of nurses providing abortion care in specialist abortion services has been limited, particularly in Australia. Methods: A qualitative research design, informed by feminist research principles was developed to explore the experience of nurses caring for women in a gendered and marginalised area of health care. A small sample of nurses, working in a specialist clinic in SA, participated in an in depth interview with the researcher, and a workshop to validate initial thematic data analysis. Results: Nurses choose to work in a specialist abortion clinic for a range of reasons. A commitment to self-determination in health care decision-making facilitates the nurses’ work in the contested environment of abortion. Four themes emerged from the data analysis. The participants’ experience was revealed, through their voices, in the themes of: with woman, finding balance, relating with care and intention and silences. Conclusion: Providing abortion care for women in a specialist setting is a rewarding and challenging experience for nurses. Doing important work that directly helps women is rewarding for nurses who have a wide scope of practice with organisational and team supports. This study confirms the findings of other research of the importance of supportive frameworks for nurses working in abortion care. Future research to develop supervisory and reflective frameworks should include the development of appropriate language to discuss the difficult aspects of work in the second trimester. Decriminalisation of abortion laws would enable nurses to provide woman centred care based on clinical guidelines, taking account of the complexities of women’s lives and responsibilities.