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How We See Shapes How We Care: Stigma, Documentation, and Everyday Nursing Practice

  In the first article of this series, the focus was on how stigma, social exclusion, and documentation practices can subtly shape the care people receive, especially in settings like methadone clinics. That piece invited us to look at policies, electronic health records, and institutional routines. This second article turns the lens even closer :  toward the stories we tell ourselves as nurses when we  encounter  people whose lives are deeply affected by structural inequity, substance use, and trauma .   Nurses  encounter  many people whose lives are shaped by complex intersections of health, identity, trauma, and structural inequity, including those who move in and out of substance use over time. For someone like Alex or Sharna, years of navigating a relationship with opioids can include periods of reduced use, times of not using at all, and ongoing efforts to stay safe, connected, and housed. Despite this resilience, the ways their lives show up in ...

Seeing Beyond the Stigma: Social Inclusion and Exclusion in Nursing Care

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In every nurse’s career, there are people whose stories challenge us to look beyond the surface, to see the complex intersections of health, identity, and circumstance. Consider Alex and Sharna, a couple who have navigated many years of living in relationship with opioids, including stretches of reduced use and times when they were not using at all. Their histories hold layers of trauma, loss, resilience, and care, as well as repeated efforts to adapt, survive, and move toward safety and stability. Yet, for many clinicians, the ways their lives show up in care, the missed appointments, periods of renewed use, or struggles with mental health, can still trigger frustration before compassion. Stigma is not just an attitude; it is a social process that shapes care .  Link and Phelan (2001) describe stigma as a relationship between labeling, stereotyping, separation, status loss, and discrimination ,   all operating within unequal power dynamics. In the healthcare setting, these ...

What is a Mental Health Nurse in 2026?

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A mental health nurse in 2026 is a specialist in working the fault lines between risk and relationship, safety and autonomy, biomedical power and human narrative. This is a question I first formally contemplated in my 2020 duoethnographic paper,  “ What is Mental Health Nursing Anyway? Advantages and Issues of Utilizing Duoethnography to Understand Mental Health Nursing .”  The role has never been simple, but the mix of rising acuity, digital surveillance, and enduring stigma has made its tensions more visible than ever. Asking myself the question, again Most recently, I have come back to this question through the lens of professional history in “A Profession Divided: Critical Reflection on the Evolution of Registered Psychiatric Nursing in Western Canada.” In that 2025 paper, I traced how institutions like Riverview Hospital and the BC School of Psychiatric Nursing shaped a distinct psychiatric nursing designation, and how its eventual closure and subsequent educational refor...