Collegian
Volume 17, Issue 3 , Pages 113-118, September 2010

Empowerment and enterprise: The political economy of nursing

  • Anne McMurray, AM, RN, PhD, FRCNA

      Affiliations

    • Murdoch University, Locked Mail Bag Service 50, Mandurah, WA 6210, Australia
    • Research Centre for Clinical and Community Practice Innovation, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Queensland 9726, Australia
    • Corresponding Author InformationTel.: +61 0409 587 850.

Received 14 December 2009; accepted 15 December 2009. published online 24 May 2010.

Throughout the past decades, Australian nursing has made significant advances in the clinical, research, and political arenas. Capitalising on these advances is a critical step in empowering the professions and a sound investment in the health of the nation. There remains a need to energise and empower the professions, to see our work as an enterprise that has value and a sense of worth because of our professional activities as well as for the political and economic contributions we make to health and wellbeing, quality of life and social justice. The contributions made by nurses and midwives need to be articulated in the policy arena, focused in professional decision-making and elaborated in our research agendas. Our professional organisations provide opportunities for solidarity, and the leverage we need to effect change at the bedside, the community and the whole of society. Renewed commitment to primary health care at the global, national and community level provides a timely rallying call to the professions to refine the way we articulate our position in health care, re-commit to culturally appropriate, socially just actions and embolden our professional goals to inspire the next generations of nurses for a more equitable future.

Keywords: Oration, Nursing, Midwifery, Political

 

 Patricia Chomley Oration, September 3, 2009, Melbourne, Australia. National Conference, Royal College of Nursing Australia.

PII: S1322-7696(09)00117-6

doi:10.1016/j.colegn.2009.12.001

Collegian
Volume 17, Issue 3 , Pages 113-118, September 2010