IMPROVISATION: Sygeplejersker på arbejde i Uganda

Forfattere

  • Helle Max Martin

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/ta.v0i51.106701

Resumé

This article is about improvisation, which is a term that nurses in Uganda employ to

describe how they overcome the practical difficulties of working in an institutional

setting, which lacks the necessary equipment, drugs and staff. On the basis of data

from Tororo Hospital in Eastern Uganda, the article explores the meanings of the term

improvisation, how it relates to a general discourse about the nursing profession, and

how the nurses handle and make sense of a complex and contradictory work situation.

Improvisation is a term that both makes customary nursing practice legitimate and

supports a professional identity under pressure. It also articulates a nostalgic longing

for better times – located both in the past, the golden age of nursing, and in the future

since the term improvisation constructs current practice as an interim phenomenon.

Thus, “improvisation” offers a way for the nurses to domesticate the contradictory

forces, which play a prominent part in nursing in Uganda today.

 

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Publiceret

2005-07-01

Citation/Eksport

Martin, H. M. (2005). IMPROVISATION: Sygeplejersker på arbejde i Uganda. Tidsskriftet Antropologi, (51). https://doi.org/10.7146/ta.v0i51.106701

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