Casey House: Interpreting the location of a Toronto AIDS hospice
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2020, Health and PlaceCitation Excerpt :Rather, as Williams (2016) argues, places connect to each other “as points of convergence where materials, symbols, values, interests, and power are brought together for use by actors in the making and remaking of those places through their continuous contestation and negotiation.” ( Williams, 2016) From this perspective, the meaning and sense of a place are constructed through an experientially-derived knowledge of that place and its relationship to a broader social and economic context (Chiotti and Joseph, 1995). Following Duff (2012, p.146), place is not merely the expression of broader structural processes the site in which social context is produced through networks, practices, and associations (Duff, 2010).
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2018, Seminars in Oncology NursingCitation Excerpt :Stressors of chronic illness centered around five themes: lack of family support, communication barriers with health care professionals, minority stress, caregiver burden, and lack of spiritual support, many of which could be ameliorated with palliative care. In terms of program development, there have been several isolated efforts to provide palliative careservices to homeless populations in Canada.131-133 One132 study demonstrated that palliative care programs for the homeless are appreciated by this group, and resulted in a significant health-care cost saving.
Navigating identity, territorial stigma, and HIV care services in Vancouver, Canada: A qualitative study
2016, Health and PlaceCitation Excerpt :As such, territorial stigmatization exacerbates inequality for these populations, often leading to considerable consequences for their well-being. The role of this socio-spatial stigmatization and exclusion in producing vulnerability to adverse health outcomes and undermining access to resources (e.g. education, employment) has been documented since the 1990s (Chesney and Smith, 1999; Chiotti and Joseph, 1995; Nations and Monte, 1996; Takahashi, 1997). This body of literature has provided an understanding of the exclusionary function of stigma associated with space, and the impacts this has on individuals’ negotiation of place and identity.