Discrimination in In-Patient Geriatric Care: A Qualitative Study on the Experiences of Employees with a Turkish Migration Background
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Study Design and Method
3. Results
3.1. Study Population
- ➢
- Forms of perceived/observed discrimination
- ➢
- Reasons for discrimination
- ➢
- Handling of discrimination (coping strategies)
- ➢
- Recommendations for institutions for avoiding/reducing discrimination
3.2. Forms of Perceived/Observed Discrimination
3.3. Reasons for Discrimination
3.4. Handling of Discrimination (Coping Strategies)
3.5. Recommendations for Institutions for Avoiding/Reducing Discrimination
4. Discussion
5. Strengths, Limitations of Study and Recommendations for Future Research
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | Categories | N (%) |
---|---|---|
Age | <35 | 7 (29.2) |
35–50 | 15 (62.5) | |
>50 | 2 (8.3) | |
Gender | Female | 23 (95.8) |
Male | 1 (4.2) | |
Marital status | Unmarried | 5 (20.8) |
Married | 11 (45.8) | |
Divorced | 8 (33.4) | |
Duration of residence in Germany (years) | 10–20 | 6 (25.0) |
21–30 | 11 (45.8) | |
>30 | 7 (29.2) | |
Born in Germany | Yes | 11 (45.8) |
No | 13 (54.2) | |
Professional status | Certified (healthcare) nurse in senior position | 4 (16.7) |
Certified (healthcare) nurse, not in senior position | 3 (12.5) | |
Geriatric nurse/healthcare nurse | 6 (25.0) | |
Nurse without formal qualification | 3 (12.5) | |
Trainee | 2 (8.3) | |
Other (catering service, ward service/kitchen assistant, gap year volunteers, etc.) | 6 (25.0) | |
Terms of employment (Missing values 4) | ≥35 hours a week | 14 (58.3) |
<35 hours a week | 6 (25.0) |
Category | Defined Example |
---|---|
Racist verbal attacks/insults | “’Fucking foreigners!’ They use that word a lot.” (IT 3: Medical nursing assistant, aged 48) “One of the residents always says ‘fucking foreigners’ or ‘you darkie’ and ‘I’m going to punch you’. In my view these words or sentences are racist.” (IT 2: geriatric nursing assistant, aged 36) “Because I wear a headscarf, she [the resident] always called me the ‘headscarf woman’ behind my back.” (IT 5: Service assistant, aged 36) |
Sexist verbal attacks/insults | “They [the residents] said things like ‘Turkish bitch’.” (IT 14: Nursing assistant, aged 41) “She [the resident] called her [employee wearing a headscarf] things like ‘cunt’.” (IT 9: Gap year volunteer, aged 20) |
Rejection | “One [of the residents] said for example, ‘She [a Turkish colleague] is a foreigner, I don’t want her.” (IT 17: Medical nursing assistant, aged 39) “She [the resident] screamed ‘Get out, I don’t want you. Go away (...), you’re a foreigner’.” (IT 10: Nursing assistant, aged 42) “She said, ‘oh, the one with the headscarf. I don’t want to be cared for by you’.” (IT 8: Trainee nurse, aged 19) |
Hindering care | “There’s a Greek resident who always says ‘Turks no, Turks, no’. (...) There are always problems with her when tending to her needs and transferring her. You can just see that she doesn’t want to touch someone.” (IT 6: Deputy senior certified geriatric nurse, aged 28) |
Harassment | “With one of the residents I actually always had this problem where she would always do or want the opposite because I wear a headscarf. If I gave her a bit of bread, she always wanted a different one.” (IT 5: Service assistant, aged 36) |
Insinuating incompetence | “Behind ones back you hear them say negative things about my colleague who wears a headscarf: ‘The one with the headscarf, she’s useless.’” (IT 13: Certified geriatric nurse, aged 29) |
Accusations | “Then she claimed that I supposedly wasn’t Turkish, but Syrian, and that I was a liar. She claimed that I was a refugee.” (IT 5: Service assistant, aged 36) |
Category | Defined Example |
---|---|
Ethnic and religious traits | “We only have dark eyes and dark hair, but still they always say ‘fucking foreigner’.” (IT 3: Medical nursing assistant, aged 48) “Maybe how we look. Because we don’t have blond hair and blue eyes.” (IT 24: Certified geriatric nurse, aged 26) “We also have Germans, blond-haired ones. He [the resident] hadn’t said the words ‘fucking foreigner, darkie’ to them yet, but he had to us.” (IT 2: Geriatric nursing assistant, aged 36) “He [the resident] doesn’t like me anyway. He doesn’t like dark-haired people, and I have dark hair.” (IT 4: Health and nursing assistant, aged 49) “One of the residents didn’t want me (...). She didn’t want a girl who wore a headscarf.” (IT 22: Certified geriatric nurse, aged 25) He [the resident] is obsessed with dark hair. For him, they’re all foreigners. You might have our dark-haired boss walk in and he’d still scream ‘fucking foreigner, get out!’” (IT 3: Medical nursing assistant, aged 48) |
Generational aspects | (Lack of) contact “These days it’s the postwar generation that never really had anything to do with the foreigners. You had the Turks here and the Germans there. But I knew three residents who had worked with Turks and they said: ‘They [Turkish colleagues] were always nice, always friendly’.” (IT 6: Deputy senior certified geriatric nurse, aged 28) “The older generation of Germans, they didn’t have this close contact with one another.” (IT 20: Certified nurse, aged 45) |
Prejudice/prejudice-based upbringing “The older [residents] had their prejudices, it wasn’t particularly nice.” (IT 6: Deputy senior certified geriatric nurse, aged 28) “They [the residents] would say things like ‘I don’t want her, she’s dirty.’” (IT 14: Nursing assistant, aged 41) As children they’d be told, ‘Foreigners are shit, disgusting, don’t be friends with them.’” (IT 3: Medical nursing assistant, aged 48) | |
War experiences “We’ve got one [resident] at the moment who always says ‘I’m German, I’m exceptional’ (...) And so I say ‘good for you that you’re German. I’m almost German too. I was born here. [The resident’s answer to this.] ‘But I’m a proper German. I look like one’.“ (IT 14: Nursing assistant, aged 41) “She [resident] talks a lot about Hitler. You can tell she used to be a supporter. (...) She’s stuck in time.” (IT 12: Domestic services assistant, aged 38) “Some have also been shaped by the war. While they don’t talk about it, some were in favour of the situation back then [National Socialism]. They still have the same attitudes from back then.” (IT 24: Certified geriatric nurse, aged 26) “We have two residents here who say ‘I hope you get to experience war.’” (IT 12: Domestic services assistant, aged 38) | |
Language/ communication barriers | “She doesn’t understand me and I don’t understand her.” (IT 10: Nursing assistant, aged 42) “Some of the patients [residents] who were mentally still fit recognize from my accent/dialect that I’m not German. They say things like ‘You need to speak clearly’.” (IT 21: Nursing assistant, aged 47) |
Need for help | “Now she’s not quite as mobile and needs more help. I think that is a big reason why she is being a lot friendlier now.” (IT: Trainee nurse, aged 19) |
Physical and psychological well-being | “I don’t take it so seriously. (...) After all, he [the resident] is sick.” (IT 2: Geriatric nursing assistant, aged 36) “There are sick people here. They have different diseases. You mustn’t forget that. Maybe they don’t really mean what they’re saying.” (IT 3: Medical nursing assistant, aged 48) |
Category | Defined Example |
---|---|
Leaving the room | “At that moment, I leave the resident in peace and come back ten minutes later. By that time, they [the resident] will have calmed down.” (IT 3: Medical nursing assistant, aged 48) |
Removing oneself from the situation | “It becomes really exhausting if the resident is verbally attacking you in Greek the entire time and making it difficult to provide care. (…) So I then kept away from her. (...) If she doesn’t want me to come then I won’t go to her. (…) This defensive attitude and the feeling of working against the current is a real burden.” (IT 6: Deputy senior certified geriatric nurse, aged 28) |
Involving a colleague | “When it got really extreme and you couldn’t even get to the resident, I left the room (...), went to a colleague and asked him if he could go and take care of her.” (IT 6: Deputy senior certified geriatric nurse, aged 28) |
Withdrawing/abandoning | “In that moment [when she is being verbally attacked], I just leave them [the resident] in peace and leave. Either they’re taken care of when someone is there, someone else, and if not, well, that’s the way it is.” (IT 2: Geriatric nursing assistant, aged 36) |
Ignoring | “I’ve just always ignored comments like ‘oh, that fucking Turk’. (IT 8: Trainee certified nurse, aged 19) “What else can I do, I laugh myself stupid and then get back on with my work. I simply ignore them [the resident] and then it’s all good.” (IT 3: Medical nursing assistant, aged 48) |
Rationalization | “You can’t be angry at them [the residents]. These are sick people, they need our help.” (IT 4: Nursing assistant, aged 49) “I then think about what she [the resident] must have experienced in the past or what kind of time she lived in and why she thinks that way.” (IT 14: Nursing assistant, aged 41) “They [residents with dementia] say one thing one moment, then they’ve forgotten this the next. They don’t really mean it. (…) Two minutes later they want to give us a kiss.“ (IT 7: Ward assistant, aged 56) |
Confrontation | “There’s nobody but this ‘fucking foreigner’ to wipe your backside.” (IT 3: Medical nursing assistant, aged 48) “One of the patients [residents] said, ‘you need to learn German’. But he was laughing while he said it. So I retorted that he needs to learn Turkish. I’ve been coming here for years.” (IT 21: Nursing assistant, aged 47) |
Category | Defined Example |
---|---|
Transparency | “I think it’s important to clarify everything beforehand when relatives become involved or new residents move in. (…) Maybe advertise more that we are multicultural. That the nursing services in the residential areas aren’t just provided by Germans, but from lots of people from different countries. (IT 24: Certified nurse, aged 26) [More transparency] “The children know how their mother is. One of the daughters always says ‘Mum, a person is a person, whether they’re white, black, Turkish or German.” (IT 6: Deputy senior certified geriatric nurse, aged 28) |
Staff assignment | “Maybe they shouldn’t send any more dark-haired nurses to care for this resident. There’s no need to unduly stress or overwhelm the resident. This is how we should avoid it.” (IT 4: Nursing assistant, aged 49) “One solution would be to perhaps stop working with residents where there is an antipathy and provide for another resident.” (IT 20: Certified nurse, aged 45) |
Relationship development | “Near the start, one of the residents said to me, ‘Oh, the one with the headscarf. I don’t want to be cared for by you.’. (…) It’s not like that at all now. We get along much better now.” (IT 8: Trainee certified nurse, aged 19) “We used to have a resident who always used to say ‘oh shit, fucking foreigner’s back again’. (…) I told my colleagues that no-one else except me should care for this lady and that I wanted to look after her alone. (…) Later I was her best friend.” (IT 3: Medical nursing assistant, aged 48) |
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Ulusoy, N.; Schablon, A. Discrimination in In-Patient Geriatric Care: A Qualitative Study on the Experiences of Employees with a Turkish Migration Background. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 2205. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17072205
Ulusoy N, Schablon A. Discrimination in In-Patient Geriatric Care: A Qualitative Study on the Experiences of Employees with a Turkish Migration Background. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(7):2205. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17072205
Chicago/Turabian StyleUlusoy, Nazan, and Anja Schablon. 2020. "Discrimination in In-Patient Geriatric Care: A Qualitative Study on the Experiences of Employees with a Turkish Migration Background" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 7: 2205. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17072205