Community nurses’ experiences and perceptions of working in substance use harm reduction: a phenomenological study
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Ruck, Amanda
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Abstract
Canada is experiencing an ongoing and rapidly unfolding drug poisoning crisis that is
especially prevalent in northwestern Ontario. Substance use is complex with significant physical
and social impacts, including patient experiences of stigma, discrimination and resultant health
inequities. Harm reduction is an important component to providing holistic care for individuals
impacted by substance use. Given nurses’ proximity to patients, along with their training in
relational practice and compassion, they are in a position to implement harm reduction
interventions and principles in their care. Harm reduction initiatives have been implemented in
northwestern Ontario, but research on nurses’ experiences and perceptions working in this area
has been limited. The purpose of this dissertation was to explore the lived experience of nurses
working in substance use harm reduction in a northern setting. van Manen’s phenomenology was
used as the methodology to guide the research. The study includes the voices of eighteen nurses
who work in substance use harm reduction. Participants were interviewed and data was analyzed
using van Manen’s phenomenology to uncover the lived experience of their work. The data was
analyzed and categorized in van Manen’s lived world existentials, including lived relationality,
space, body and time. Within the nurses’ harm reduction practice, care was perceived and
experienced as relationally contingent, with trust playing an important role in relationship
development. Facilitators of trust and relationship development are explored. In addition to lived
relationality, the nurses described the essence of their experiences related to lived space. The
nurses’ conceptualizations of the space of harm reduction and factors underpinning the
conceptualizations are described. Related to lived body, harm reduction work as an embodied
experience is explored, including several psychological and some physical experiences.
Additionally, how nurses protected the body from these impacts are described. Finally, in lived time, motivations to work in harm reduction, reasons to stay, shifted perceptions, and the future
direction of harm reduction are detailed. This work offers implications for practice in northern
settings, practice recommendations and potential areas for future research.
