Nursing students in Saharan refugee camps: Expectations and options of professional future from a qualitative perspective
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/79458Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Martínez Linares, José Manuel; Cazalilla-Parras, Sonia; Yuba-Francia, Javier; López-Entambasaguas, Olga MaríaEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Nursing Nursing students Nursing education Refugee camp Qualitative research
Fecha
2022-10-10Referencia bibliográfica
Cazalilla-Parras, S., Martínez-Linares, J. M., Yuba-Francia, J., & López-Entrambasaguas, O. M. (2022). Nursing students in Saharan refugee camps: Expectations and options of professional future from a qualitative perspective. Nurse education in practice, 65, 103466. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nepr.2022.103466
Patrocinador
Universidad de Granada; Andalusian Agency for International Development Cooperation of the Junta de Andalucía, Spain (Reference: 2014DEC/008)Resumen
Aim: The aim of this study was to explore and understand the perceptions of the expectations of the professional
future of nursing students who study in Saharan refugee camps.
Background: Part of the Saharan population live in refugee camps with a precarious healthcare system, which
depends on nursing professionals who are trained in the only nursing school in the world that exists inside a
refugee camp.
Design: An interpretive qualitative research methodology using Gadamer’s philosophical hermeneutics.
Methods: A qualitative study with nursing students (n = 14) of different years from the nursing school in a
Saharan refugee camp (Algeria) in 2021. Focus groups recorded in audio for subsequent transcription and
analysis by two researchers through Fleming´s stages.
Results: Three themes were identified as important aspects of the personal and professional expectations
perceived by this population group: (1) studying nursing as a moral obligation; (2) Culture as a determinant for
dropping out of school; and (3) aspirations for a professional future in the Saharan refugee camps. The participants
highlighted the role of social and cultural aspects to complete their studies and develop a professional
career.
Conclusions: These Saharan nursing students can study a nursing speciality or work in healthcare. However, they
struggle to choose between the moral obligation of doing so and the social and cultural factors that lead some of
them to abandon their studies.
Tweetable abstract: The possibility of studying for a career and the professional future of Saharan nursing studies
are conditioned by the environment, culture and the socio-economic situation. Their work is especially important
in the refugee camps where they live.