Every day, hospital nurses must negotiate intimate trust and intimate conflict in an effort to provide quality health care. However, interactions between nurses and patients - which often require issues of privacy - are some...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

Every day, hospital nurses must negotiate intimate trust and intimate conflict in an effort to provide quality health care. However, interactions between nurses and patients - which often require issues of privacy - are sometimes made more uncomfortable with inappropriate behaviour, as when a patient has a racist and/or sexist outburst. Not all nurses are prepared to handle such intimacy, but they can all learn how to be caring. In Catheters, Slurs, and Pickup Lines, Lisa Ruchti carefully examines this fragile relationship between intimacy and professional care, and provides a language for patients, nurses, and administrators to teach, conduct, and advocate for knowledgeable and skilled intimate care in a hospital setting. She also recommends best training practices and practical and effective policy changes to handle conflicts. Ruchti shows that caring is not just a personality characteristic but is work that is structured by intersections of race, gender, and nationality.

Similar Products

Dealing in Desire: Asian Ascendancy, Western Decline, and the Hidden Currencies of Global Sex WorkJust One of the Guys?: Transgender Men and the Persistence of Gender InequalityOn the Fireline: Living and Dying with Wildland Firefighters (Fieldwork Encounters and Discoveries)Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to LeadStrip Club: Gender, Power, and Sex Work (Intersections)