Toronto Metropolitan University
Browse

File(s) not publicly available

An international internship on social development led by Canadian nursing students: Empowering learning

journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-24, 19:58 authored by Kateryna MeterskyKateryna Metersky, Margareth ZanchettaMargareth Zanchetta, Jasna SchwindJasna Schwind, Franklin F. Gorospe IV, Lira Santiago

Background

A Canadian nursing student-led knowledge dissemination project on health promotion for social development was implemented with local professionals and communities in Brazil.

Objectives

(a) to identify how student-interns contrasted Canadian and Brazilian cultural and social realities within a primary healthcare context from a social development perspective; (b) to examine how philosophical underpinnings, including social critical theory and notions of social justice, guided student-interns in acknowledging inequalities in primary healthcare in Brazil; and (c) to participate in the debate on the contribution of Canadian nursing students to the global movement for social development.

Design and Setting

A qualitative appraisal of short-term outcomes of an international internship in the cities of Birigui & Araçatuba (São Paulo-Brazil).

Participants

Four Canadian fourth-year undergraduate nursing students enrolled in a metropolitan university program.

Methods

Recruitment was through an email invitation to the student-interns, who accepted, and signed informed consent forms. Their participation was unpaid and voluntary. One-time individual interviews were conducted at the end of their internships. Transcriptions of the audio-recorded interviews were coded using the qualitative software program ATLAS ti 6.0. The findings were analyzed using thematic analysis.

Results

Student-interns' learning unfolded from making associations among concepts, new ideas, and their previous experiences, leading to a personal transformation through which they established new conceptual and personal connections. The two main themes revealed by the thematic analysis were dichotomizing realities, that is, acknowledging the existence of “two sides of each situation,” and discovering an unexpected reciprocity between global and urban health. Furthermore, the student-interns achieved personal and professional empowerment.

Conclusions

The knowledge gained from the international experience helped the student-interns learn how to collaborate with Brazilian society's sectors to improve the social conditions of a “marginalized population”. Student-interns became aware of their inner power to promote change by making invisible inequity visible in their own terms.

History

Language

English

Usage metrics

    Nursing

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC