Discipline of Nursing. Michel Nadot
the individual/family (Familia/Hominem), enriches nursing knowledge. It is a matter of proving that nursing is not only a collection of knowledge borrowed from other disciplines, particularly medicine and humanities, but also that it has a distinct identity. Thus, the schematization would be more harmonious by constructing a knowledge that places the human being at the center and in continuous interaction with a changing healthcare environment.
In this book, Nadot sheds light on several factors, highlighting that our nursing science has not reached the same level compared to other existing sciences. According to him, it is a question of the female status of the profession, and the evolution of this status in our societies at different rates of development of scientific research. However, for a discipline to develop, it must be neutral, exclusive of gender, consistent and must reflect the world it came from. For Karl Popper [POP 85], for example, a discipline can only claim the status of a scientific discipline if it produces falsifiable statements, that is, statements that are capable, in the form of testable hypotheses, of being subjected to the test of experimentation.
Nadot’s book is one of the European reference works that calls on the reflexivity of nursing researchers, teachers, managers and theorists from North America, Europe, Africa and the Middle East to formulate, based on their theories and scientific statements, hypotheses that are supposed to be subjected to experimentation with the aim of attaining a consensual construction of a scientific status for the nursing discipline in the 21st Century. Let us thus take advantage of the globalization of nursing knowledge to develop a disciplinary identity that takes into account the influence of the demographic, political, economic, scientific, social, regulatory, cultural and technological environment of a constantly changing healthcare environment.
This is what makes this book innovative, a true disciplinary revolution, a call for a major paradigmatic change or better, a real conceptual clean-up to come. It calls for the construction of a clear status for the discipline, a distinct professional identity and a scientific discipline that only increases the credibility of the nursing profession, as well as the confidence of other healthcare professionals and, above all, of all the beneficiaries of the services provided by nurses in response to ever-increasing healthcare needs.
Finally, I conclude with Bachelard [BAC 83] who said that nothing is selfevident. Nothing is given, everything is built. This is the case with this book. So let us demystify and overcome the nursing myth that we currently know and build together the nursing sciences of the 21st Century!
Rima SASSINE KAZAN
Dean of the Faculty of Nursing
Saint-Joseph University of Beirut, Lebanon
August 2020
1 1 Where the hospital depends on the school on a geographical, administrative and financial basis.
2 2 An opposing model to the previous, where the school depends on the hospital on a geographical, administrative and financial basis.
Preface
Female caregivers1, and with them their knowledge or their own discipline, are still epistemologically subject to a historical cultural domination imposed at the end of the 18th Century. Nurses have few historians. Others took it upon themselves to write their own history. As the narrator of the Howard Zinn film about American popular history would say, “Until the rabbits have a historian, the story will be told by the hunters”. Can we get rid of the cliché? Of course, it is up to the discipline and its members (the rabbits) to appropriate their history and define its object. However, as Gélis pointed out, “historians of health practices were for a long time doctors anxious to write the past of their profession; the helpers, the guards, the caretakers, were in their eyes only auxiliaries. The humble, everyday life; this was not… history!” [GÉL 88]. This may partly explain why nursing professors did not take ownership of the history of their knowledge from the very beginning. As a nurse, health executive or researcher, it is not common to study history. Who would fund such studies? Why not, however, try to expose the knowledge of the past, notably by publishing this book, in order to identify what our spaces of speech and language traditions are made of? “After all, why should we deny the right of the members of a profession to take up their past for themselves, as long as they meet the requirements of historical research?” [GÉL 88].
The role and conditions favoring the emergence of the history of knowledge within the nursing profession are not always well perceived and understood, as they are difficult to access. It did not all start with Florence Nightingale! Retrieving traces of daily care presents many difficulties for the nurse historian engaged in research. These traces, too ordinary to constitute scholarly heritage, have eluded health historians until recently. Before being able to describe and interpret the world that was theirs, women caregivers were linguistically colonized by dominant cultures. In order: church, medicine and the military (Red Cross). As Gérard Noiriel rightly points out, “one of the essential forms of domination in history was between those who had the power to describe and interpret the world through writing and those who had only oral language” [NOI 18].
Writing has status, and to write about nursing requires access to the legitimate places of knowledge production (e.g. university) and a cultural understanding of professional practices and the environment in which they are practiced. According to Marrou, “in order to know its purpose, the historian must have in his personal culture, in the very structure of his mind, the psychological affinities that will allow him to imagine, feel and understand the feelings of the past that he will find in the documents” [MAR 54].
Precisely in terms of personal culture, it may be relevant to describe the main stages, given the rather atypical profile of my educational and professional background. I was born under the bombing of the town of Montbéliard (France) in preparation for its liberation during the offensive of Marshal de Lattre de Tassigny between November 14 and 17, 1944. After technical training at the Peugeot Automobiles Apprenticeship School and several months of practice in this national company, I left my home region for a complete change of air and orientation. I couldn’t breathe! Being subservient to machines and workshop managers was not really meant to please.
It was then the restart of a training cycle. After training as a psychiatric nurse in French-speaking Switzerland and several years of care practice as a nurse in various hospital institutions, followed by two to three years of management practice as a nursing executive, followed by more than 30 years of teaching practice and 10 years of scientific research practice at the Haute école de santé de Fribourg (Freiburg’s Higher School of Health), my experience seems to be well diversified to be able to talk about it. After having climbed one by one up the ladder from primary school to post-doctorate, it is as a professor of nursing that my interest in studying the history and epistemology of this as yet little-known discipline developed.
These lived experiences allow this somewhat naive explorer to open paths. Without having really programmed it, I find myself in new avenues with the feeling of being the “first” under different horizons. Being the “first” male nurse, a lay graduate in a Catholic hospital in the Swiss Jura region run by the Sisters of Saint Martha of Beaune, the “first” lay director of care in a small hospital on the Neuchâtel coast run by Protestant deaconess sisters, the “first” professor of history2 and epistemology in nursing sciences in French-speaking Switzerland, the “first” teacher with a doctorate in a nursing school that was not yet a university level school at the time, the “first” professor at the Haute école de santé de Fribourg to have the status of associate professor in foreign nursing faculties (Canada, Lebanon), the “first” historian to bring the founder of the world’s first school of nursing out of the shadows (Valérie de Gasparin) and, finally, the “first” man to appear alongside major theorists of the nursing discipline