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Actes du Colloque "Care et compétences transculturelles" du 28 octobre 2011 / Nathalie Cobbaut (2012)
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Titre : Actes du Colloque "Care et compétences transculturelles" du 28 octobre 2011 Type de document : Livre Auteurs : Nathalie Cobbaut ; Rachid Bathoum ; Yves Dario Editeur : Bruxelles : Centre de l'égalité des chances et la lutte contre le racisme Année de publication : 2012 Autre Editeur : Bruxelles [Bruxelles] : Service public fédéral (SPF) Santé publique, sécurité de la chaine alimentaire et environnement Importance : 39 p. Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Groupes ethniques ; Pauvreté ; Personnes handicapées ; Soins adaptés sur le plan culturelMots-clés : Droits civiques Comportement sexuel Résumé : Le Centre a créé en son sein un Groupe de Travail consacré au Care. Celui-ci sest notamment fixé pour objectif de travailler sur la lutte contre les discriminations et la promotion de la diversité dans le secteur des soins de santé. Cest dans ce cadre que sinscrit lorganisation du colloque consacré aux compétences transculturelles.
Les professionnels de la santé sont en effet de plus en plus amenés à sinterroger sur leurs pratiques professionnelles et sur leurs approches vis-à-vis de personnes ayant des cadres de référence différents et des problèmes spécifiques. Cette journée de réflexion et de débats vise à clarifier la portée du leitmotiv selon lequel il faut traiter les gens de façon égale, en tenant compte de leur différence.Disponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : http://unia.be/fr/publications-et-statistiques/publications/care-et-competences- [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=112949 Actes du Colloque "Care et compétences transculturelles" du 28 octobre 2011 [Livre] / Nathalie Cobbaut ; Rachid Bathoum ; Yves Dario . - Bruxelles : Centre de l'égalité des chances et la lutte contre le racisme : Bruxelles (Bruxelles) : Service public fédéral (SPF) Santé publique, sécurité de la chaine alimentaire et environnement, 2012 . - 39 p.
Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Groupes ethniques ; Pauvreté ; Personnes handicapées ; Soins adaptés sur le plan culturelMots-clés : Droits civiques Comportement sexuel Résumé : Le Centre a créé en son sein un Groupe de Travail consacré au Care. Celui-ci sest notamment fixé pour objectif de travailler sur la lutte contre les discriminations et la promotion de la diversité dans le secteur des soins de santé. Cest dans ce cadre que sinscrit lorganisation du colloque consacré aux compétences transculturelles.
Les professionnels de la santé sont en effet de plus en plus amenés à sinterroger sur leurs pratiques professionnelles et sur leurs approches vis-à-vis de personnes ayant des cadres de référence différents et des problèmes spécifiques. Cette journée de réflexion et de débats vise à clarifier la portée du leitmotiv selon lequel il faut traiter les gens de façon égale, en tenant compte de leur différence.Disponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : http://unia.be/fr/publications-et-statistiques/publications/care-et-competences- [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=112949 Exemplaires (1)
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 364.4 COB Livre Louvain-la-Neuve Sciences sociales Prêt autorisé
DisponibleAn investigation of the relationship between ethnicity and success in a BSc (Hons) Physiotherapy degree programme in the UK / Annabel Williams in Physiotherapy, 2015/2 (2015)
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[article]
Titre : An investigation of the relationship between ethnicity and success in a BSc (Hons) Physiotherapy degree programme in the UK Type de document : Article Auteurs : Annabel Williams ; Meriel Norris ; Elizabeth Cassidy Article en page(s) : pp. 198-203 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Education ; Groupes ethniques ; Kinésithérapie (spécialité)Mots-clés : Physical Therapy Specialty Ethnic Groups Résumé : Objectives
To explore the potential relationship between ethnicity and achievement within undergraduate physiotherapy education.
Design
A retrospective analysis of assessment marks awarded for academic and clinical modules.
Setting
A London University offering undergraduate physiotherapy education.
Participants
Four hundred forty-eight undergraduate students enrolled onto the Physiotherapy honours degree programme between 2005 and 2009.
Main outcome measures
Marks awarded following academic or clinical assessment. These were modelled through multivariable regression analysis to evaluate the relationship between marks awarded and ethnicity.
Results
Differences were noted between ethnic categories in final programme success and across academic and clinical modules. Our multivariable analysis demonstrated students from Asian backgrounds had decreased odds of succeeding compared with white British students (adjusted OR 0.43 95%CI 0.24, 0.79 P = 0.006), as had Black students (adjusted OR 0.42 95%CI 0.19, 0.95 P = 0.036) and students from Other ethnic backgrounds (adjusted OR 0.41 95%CI 0.20, 0.87 P = 0.020).
Conclusions
This analysis of undergraduate physiotherapy students illustrated a persistent difference in attainment between students from white British and those from BME backgrounds. Heterogeneity in academic outcomes both within and between minority ethnic groups was illustrated. This study not only reinforces the need to consider ethnicity within physiotherapy education but also raises further questions about why physiotherapy students from BME groups perform less well than their white British peers.Disponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : https://login.ezproxy.vinci.be/login?url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/a [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=134228
in Physiotherapy > 2015/2 (2015) . - pp. 198-203[article] An investigation of the relationship between ethnicity and success in a BSc (Hons) Physiotherapy degree programme in the UK [Article] / Annabel Williams ; Meriel Norris ; Elizabeth Cassidy . - pp. 198-203.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Physiotherapy > 2015/2 (2015) . - pp. 198-203
Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Education ; Groupes ethniques ; Kinésithérapie (spécialité)Mots-clés : Physical Therapy Specialty Ethnic Groups Résumé : Objectives
To explore the potential relationship between ethnicity and achievement within undergraduate physiotherapy education.
Design
A retrospective analysis of assessment marks awarded for academic and clinical modules.
Setting
A London University offering undergraduate physiotherapy education.
Participants
Four hundred forty-eight undergraduate students enrolled onto the Physiotherapy honours degree programme between 2005 and 2009.
Main outcome measures
Marks awarded following academic or clinical assessment. These were modelled through multivariable regression analysis to evaluate the relationship between marks awarded and ethnicity.
Results
Differences were noted between ethnic categories in final programme success and across academic and clinical modules. Our multivariable analysis demonstrated students from Asian backgrounds had decreased odds of succeeding compared with white British students (adjusted OR 0.43 95%CI 0.24, 0.79 P = 0.006), as had Black students (adjusted OR 0.42 95%CI 0.19, 0.95 P = 0.036) and students from Other ethnic backgrounds (adjusted OR 0.41 95%CI 0.20, 0.87 P = 0.020).
Conclusions
This analysis of undergraduate physiotherapy students illustrated a persistent difference in attainment between students from white British and those from BME backgrounds. Heterogeneity in academic outcomes both within and between minority ethnic groups was illustrated. This study not only reinforces the need to consider ethnicity within physiotherapy education but also raises further questions about why physiotherapy students from BME groups perform less well than their white British peers.Disponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : https://login.ezproxy.vinci.be/login?url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/a [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=134228 BAME is not my NAME : a Community of Cultures Maternity Forum (CoCMF) in Midwifery Digest (Midirs), Vol. 30, n° 3 (September 2020)
[article]
Titre : BAME is not my NAME : a Community of Cultures Maternity Forum (CoCMF) Type de document : Article Année de publication : 2020 Article en page(s) : p. 279-281 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Communauté ; Conversation ; Groupes ethniques ; Internet ; Maternité ; Population d'origine asiatique ; Sage-femme ; VirtuelRésumé : One evening the frustration of seeing all the conversations and retweets around COVID, and its effects on BAME staff/communities, left me asking: who would be interested in a discussion in a virtual chat?
I invited all those who responded and someone mentioned how great it was to be starting a BAME maternity forum.
I knew this was something I had to address. As an Asian I fall into the BAME category and, while I use the term to have my voice heard, I do not identify with it at all. Most BAME people, pre-COVID media, did not recognise this as a descriptor of Black, Asian, Minority Ethnic groups, or realise that this was a term coined to describe them. The term was probably created by a well-meaning high-level official who was trying to make everyones life easier for discussions and reports around ethnicity. But in doing so they alienated entire communities further, for if these communities are unaware that BAME refers to them, how will they pay attention to, engage in, or oppose vital debates, discussions and plans regarding them?Disponible en ligne : Non Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=258184
in Midwifery Digest (Midirs) > Vol. 30, n° 3 (September 2020) . - p. 279-281[article] BAME is not my NAME : a Community of Cultures Maternity Forum (CoCMF) [Article] . - 2020 . - p. 279-281.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Midwifery Digest (Midirs) > Vol. 30, n° 3 (September 2020) . - p. 279-281
Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Communauté ; Conversation ; Groupes ethniques ; Internet ; Maternité ; Population d'origine asiatique ; Sage-femme ; VirtuelRésumé : One evening the frustration of seeing all the conversations and retweets around COVID, and its effects on BAME staff/communities, left me asking: who would be interested in a discussion in a virtual chat?
I invited all those who responded and someone mentioned how great it was to be starting a BAME maternity forum.
I knew this was something I had to address. As an Asian I fall into the BAME category and, while I use the term to have my voice heard, I do not identify with it at all. Most BAME people, pre-COVID media, did not recognise this as a descriptor of Black, Asian, Minority Ethnic groups, or realise that this was a term coined to describe them. The term was probably created by a well-meaning high-level official who was trying to make everyones life easier for discussions and reports around ethnicity. But in doing so they alienated entire communities further, for if these communities are unaware that BAME refers to them, how will they pay attention to, engage in, or oppose vital debates, discussions and plans regarding them?Disponible en ligne : Non Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=258184 Exemplaires (1)
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité Midwifery Digest (Midirs). Vol. 30, n° 3 (September 2020) Périodique papier Woluwe (Promenade de l'Alma) périodiques Exclu du prêt Birthing in South America: political-cultural context of birth, options and a new horizon / Cynthia Ingar in Midwifery Digest (Midirs), Vol. 29, n° 1 (March 2019)
[article]
Titre : Birthing in South America: political-cultural context of birth, options and a new horizon Type de document : Article Auteurs : Cynthia Ingar Année de publication : 2019 Article en page(s) : p. 119-122 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Accouchement à domicile ; Amérique du Sud ; Centres de naissance ; Culture (sociologie) ; Ecole ; Groupes ethniques ; Parturition ; Sage-femmeRésumé : South american countries have a similar cultural and political context around birth, together with historic processes. Almost every country in the continent has had or still has a strong, indigenous system of midwifery. They have also officially exported a biomedical model, included for the practice of modern obstetrics. This has generated a transformation in the way South American women are giving birth and in the options they have. This first article explores such social and cultural dynamics, as in relation to the practice of local midwifery and the new players that have emerged as a response to the over medicalisation of birth in the continent. Disponible en ligne : Non Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=87569
in Midwifery Digest (Midirs) > Vol. 29, n° 1 (March 2019) . - p. 119-122[article] Birthing in South America: political-cultural context of birth, options and a new horizon [Article] / Cynthia Ingar . - 2019 . - p. 119-122.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Midwifery Digest (Midirs) > Vol. 29, n° 1 (March 2019) . - p. 119-122
Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Accouchement à domicile ; Amérique du Sud ; Centres de naissance ; Culture (sociologie) ; Ecole ; Groupes ethniques ; Parturition ; Sage-femmeRésumé : South american countries have a similar cultural and political context around birth, together with historic processes. Almost every country in the continent has had or still has a strong, indigenous system of midwifery. They have also officially exported a biomedical model, included for the practice of modern obstetrics. This has generated a transformation in the way South American women are giving birth and in the options they have. This first article explores such social and cultural dynamics, as in relation to the practice of local midwifery and the new players that have emerged as a response to the over medicalisation of birth in the continent. Disponible en ligne : Non Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=87569 Exemplaires (1)
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité REV Périodique papier Woluwe (Promenade de l'Alma) périodiques Exclu du prêt Countries birth scope / Cynthia Ingar in Midwifery Digest (Midirs), Vol. 29, n° 1 (March 2019)
[article]
Titre : Countries birth scope Type de document : Article Auteurs : Cynthia Ingar Année de publication : 2019 Article en page(s) : p. 123-128 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Amérique du Sud ; Argentine ; Bolivie ; Brésil ; Césarienne ; Chili ; Colombie ; Equateur ; Groupes ethniques ; Naissance ; Paraguay ; Parturition ; Pérou ; Sage-femme ; Uruguay ; VenezuelaRésumé : The political and cultural concept of birth in South America has been discussed in an earlier paper (Ingar 2019). This large continent comprises many countries which all differ to varying, degrees in models of birth and services for women. This paper outlines the different models of birth practised within South America. Disponible en ligne : Non Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=87570
in Midwifery Digest (Midirs) > Vol. 29, n° 1 (March 2019) . - p. 123-128[article] Countries birth scope [Article] / Cynthia Ingar . - 2019 . - p. 123-128.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Midwifery Digest (Midirs) > Vol. 29, n° 1 (March 2019) . - p. 123-128
Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Amérique du Sud ; Argentine ; Bolivie ; Brésil ; Césarienne ; Chili ; Colombie ; Equateur ; Groupes ethniques ; Naissance ; Paraguay ; Parturition ; Pérou ; Sage-femme ; Uruguay ; VenezuelaRésumé : The political and cultural concept of birth in South America has been discussed in an earlier paper (Ingar 2019). This large continent comprises many countries which all differ to varying, degrees in models of birth and services for women. This paper outlines the different models of birth practised within South America. Disponible en ligne : Non Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=87570 Exemplaires (1)
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