“You Had to Just Kind of Rub Her Cheek”: Memories and Emotions of Mental Deficiency Nurses in Alberta, Canada, 1945 - 1975
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17483/2368-6669.1247Abstract
Mental deficiency nursing evolved as a distinct, yet little known field of nursing education and practice in several countries during the twentieth century. In Canada it became a separate area of nursing in only one of its provinces, Alberta, and it was tied to one large institution, called the Provincial Training School for the care of developmentally disabled children and, eventually, also adults. This paper contributes to the history of mental deficiency nursing, currently called intellectual disability nursing, an existing specialty actively practiced in the UK and Ireland, for example. Alberta’s program was established in 1933 and continued until 1973.
I examine this history through the lens of three mental deficiency nurses’ experiences of their education and work at the institution shared in an oral history interview. These nurses worked in the institution in the period after the Second World War. Their stories provide a unique perspective on a field of nursing work and education that grew increasingly controversial during the latter half of the 20th century when public debate arose over the institutionalization of people with developmental disability. Moreover, the institution’s entanglement within an active eugenics policy and practice maintained in the province of Alberta until 1972 added to the controversy. Their stories provide insight in the perceptions and emotions of mental deficiency nurses, experienced and remembered some 60 years later in an interview. I examine how the nurses took up this work and how their professional identity was depicted and changed, especially as public debate arose from the 1970s onward. The stories provide a unique micro-historical lens to explore larger social and cultural tensions over eugenics, disability, care and dependency, and over mental deficiency nurses’ work.
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Copyright (c) 2020 Geertje Boschma (Author)

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