A look behind the screens in Papua New Guinea

Margaret Voigt
Lutheran School of Nursing, Madang, Papua New Guinea

PP: 222 - 227

Abstract

Nursing care is affected by the culture we live in and even when nursing care is given the same way in different societies, it can be given that way for different reasons. This was found when doing a comparison between how certain aspects of nursing care were performed and viewed in Australia and Papua New Guinea.

The framework for comparison was derived from part of Lawler's book (1991) Behind the Screens: Nursing, Somology, and the Problem of the Body. The feelings and accounts of staff and students working in Papua New Guinea (in 1997) are compared with those expressed by Australian nurses interviewed by Lawler in the mid 1980s.

Interviews and observations in Papua New Guinea are summarised and then analysed looking at similarities and differences between the two cultures especially in giving body care and care after death.

Keywords

cultural diversity; cultural values; nursing care; relationships


View references

References

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Burkitt I (1997) Social relationships and emotions. Sociology 31(1): 37-55.

Gillett J (1990) The high risk of childbirth. In The Health of Women in Papua New Guinea, pp. 99-106. Papua New Guinea Institute of Medical Research, Goroka.

Kyakas A & Wiessner P (1992) Menstruation. In From Inside the Woman's House: Enga Women's Lives and Traditions, pp. 82-91. Robert Brown & Associates, Buranda, Queensland.

Lawler J (1991) Behind the Screens: Nursing, Somology, and the Problem of the Body. Churchill Livingstone, Melbourne.

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van der Riet P (1997) The body, the person, technologies and nursing. In Lawler J (ed.) The Body in Nursing, pp. 95-107. Churchill Livingstone, Melbourne.



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