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Global Health in Swedish Nursing Curricula: Navigating the Desirable and the Necessary

Author

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  • Monne Wihlborg

    (Department of Health Sciences, Integrative Health Research, Faculty of Medicine, Lund University, 22210 Lund, Sweden)

  • Helen Avery

    (Centre for Environmental and Climate Science (CEC), Faculty of Natural Sciences, Lund University, 22210 Lund, Sweden
    Centre for Advanced Middle Eastern Studies (CMES), Faculty of Social Sciences, Lund University, 22210 Lund, Sweden
    Department of Languages, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Linnaeus University, 35195 Växjö, Sweden)

Abstract

Global health challenges are likely to be aggravated in the coming years by rapid climate change and environmental degradation. To address the resulting health inequities, nurses need an integrated understanding of environmental and social determinants of health. This study adopts an explorative inductive approach to examine how global health and sustainability are expressed the course syllabi of undergraduate nursing programmes ( n = 24) in Sweden. After excluding biomedical and other unrelated content, 67 syllabi were selected for a thematic analysis. Results indicate that global health, the social determinants of health and sustainability tend to appear in a fragmented manner in the syllabi. Global health content is often limited, relegated to elective courses, or altogether missing. A theoretical framework is lacking, and focus lies on an individual rather than structural perspective. Based on international policy, earlier studies on undergraduate nursing education and theoretical work, suggestions are made for how global health and sustainability content could be integrated into nursing education, notably by using a structural competency approach.

Suggested Citation

  • Monne Wihlborg & Helen Avery, 2021. "Global Health in Swedish Nursing Curricula: Navigating the Desirable and the Necessary," IJERPH, MDPI, vol. 18(17), pages 1-21, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jijerp:v:18:y:2021:i:17:p:9372-:d:629477
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    References listed on IDEAS

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