The Lived Experience of Global Public Health Practice: A Phenomenological Account of Women Graduate Students

There is a dearth of research that aims to understand graduate students’ lived experience of global health practice. Difficulties, distress, and trauma occur before and after these students’ placement abroad, and they often increase when returning home. Moreover, few articles address the increased v...

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Main Authors: Corey McAuliffe, Ross Upshur, Daniel W. Sellen, Erica Di Ruggiero
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Harvard FXB Center for Health and Human Rights 2019-06-01
Series:Health and Human Rights
Online Access:https://cdn1.sph.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/2469/2019/07/Mcauliffe.pdf
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spelling doaj-d4480d27085f42799b73ef723edf34252020-11-25T01:15:25ZengHarvard FXB Center for Health and Human RightsHealth and Human Rights2150-41132150-41132019-06-01211115127The Lived Experience of Global Public Health Practice: A Phenomenological Account of Women Graduate StudentsCorey McAuliffe0Ross UpshurDaniel W. SellenErica Di RuggieroPhD candidate in the Division of Social and Behavioural Health Sciences, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Canada.There is a dearth of research that aims to understand graduate students’ lived experience of global health practice. Difficulties, distress, and trauma occur before and after these students’ placement abroad, and they often increase when returning home. Moreover, few articles address the increased vulnerabilities faced by women, such as sexual violence and gender-based discrimination. We conducted a phenomenological study to understand the lived experience of Canadian and US women graduate students participating in global public health practice. Eight participants participated in 21 in-depth interviews, while 17 participants created 35 lived experience descriptions through a guided writing exercise. Our findings reveal participants’ underlying discomfort with privilege while conducting fieldwork abroad, as well as depressive feelings once they return home. According to participants, while their global health fieldwork challenged previous ways of thinking and being, limited spaces and avenues for openly sharing these processes contributed to mental health challenges. Participants reported that these interviews were their first opportunity to fully share their global health experiences. Based on our analysis of these shared experiences, we argue that academic institutions participating in global health should provide appropriate and accessible resources, adequate financial compensation, safe spaces for authentic conversations, and time for processing experiences throughout the research cycle and especially in the months and years following fieldwork.https://cdn1.sph.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/2469/2019/07/Mcauliffe.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Corey McAuliffe
Ross Upshur
Daniel W. Sellen
Erica Di Ruggiero
spellingShingle Corey McAuliffe
Ross Upshur
Daniel W. Sellen
Erica Di Ruggiero
The Lived Experience of Global Public Health Practice: A Phenomenological Account of Women Graduate Students
Health and Human Rights
author_facet Corey McAuliffe
Ross Upshur
Daniel W. Sellen
Erica Di Ruggiero
author_sort Corey McAuliffe
title The Lived Experience of Global Public Health Practice: A Phenomenological Account of Women Graduate Students
title_short The Lived Experience of Global Public Health Practice: A Phenomenological Account of Women Graduate Students
title_full The Lived Experience of Global Public Health Practice: A Phenomenological Account of Women Graduate Students
title_fullStr The Lived Experience of Global Public Health Practice: A Phenomenological Account of Women Graduate Students
title_full_unstemmed The Lived Experience of Global Public Health Practice: A Phenomenological Account of Women Graduate Students
title_sort lived experience of global public health practice: a phenomenological account of women graduate students
publisher Harvard FXB Center for Health and Human Rights
series Health and Human Rights
issn 2150-4113
2150-4113
publishDate 2019-06-01
description There is a dearth of research that aims to understand graduate students’ lived experience of global health practice. Difficulties, distress, and trauma occur before and after these students’ placement abroad, and they often increase when returning home. Moreover, few articles address the increased vulnerabilities faced by women, such as sexual violence and gender-based discrimination. We conducted a phenomenological study to understand the lived experience of Canadian and US women graduate students participating in global public health practice. Eight participants participated in 21 in-depth interviews, while 17 participants created 35 lived experience descriptions through a guided writing exercise. Our findings reveal participants’ underlying discomfort with privilege while conducting fieldwork abroad, as well as depressive feelings once they return home. According to participants, while their global health fieldwork challenged previous ways of thinking and being, limited spaces and avenues for openly sharing these processes contributed to mental health challenges. Participants reported that these interviews were their first opportunity to fully share their global health experiences. Based on our analysis of these shared experiences, we argue that academic institutions participating in global health should provide appropriate and accessible resources, adequate financial compensation, safe spaces for authentic conversations, and time for processing experiences throughout the research cycle and especially in the months and years following fieldwork.
url https://cdn1.sph.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/2469/2019/07/Mcauliffe.pdf
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