Views on Self-Care by Immigrant Undergraduate Nursing Students: A Phenomenographic Study

dc.contributor.advisorVenturato, Lorraine
dc.contributor.authorGil, Margarita
dc.contributor.committeememberClancy, Tracey
dc.contributor.committeememberMcCaffrey, Graham
dc.date2026-06
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-03T21:27:08Z
dc.date.issued2026-02-26
dc.description.abstractSelf-care is widely promoted in nursing education as essential for student well-being, resilience, and professional sustainability. However, little is known about how self-care is conceptualized and experienced by immigrant undergraduate nursing students. This thesis addresses this gap through a phenomenographic study exploring the qualitatively different ways first-generation immigrant nursing students in Canada understand and practice self-care. The thesis includes two draft manuscripts. The first is a narrative review examining how self-care has been defined in undergraduate nursing education literature. Findings reveal broad, predominantly individualistic definitions of self-care, with minimal attention to immigrant student perspectives. The absence of culturally and migration-informed conceptualizations highlights a significant gap in current scholarship. The second manuscript presents findings from six in-depth interviews with first-generation immigrant undergraduate nursing students enrolled in a Canadian Bachelor of Nursing programme. Using phenomenographic analysis, categories of description were developed to represent the collective variation in how participants conceptualized and experienced self-care. The outcome space indicates that self-care among first-generation immigrant undergraduate nursing students was individually defined and influenced by dynamic and context-dependent processes shaped by pre-migration and migration experiences, culture, language, identity development, and access to time and financial resources. By foregrounding immigrant student voices, this study contributes to a more inclusive understanding of self-care that reflects the diverse realities of immigrant students and offers a framework for rethinking how self-care is taught, supported, and practiced in nursing education. Simultaneously, rather than understanding self-care as a singular definition, this study highlights the need for a more open and flexible understanding of self-care as a concept that is inherently shaped by context, identity, and lived experience.
dc.identifier.citationGil, M. (2026). Views on self-care by immigrant undergraduate nursing students: a phenomenographic study (Master's thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca.
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1880/124281
dc.identifier.urihttps://dx.doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/51155
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisher.facultyGraduate Studies
dc.publisher.institutionUniversity of Calgary
dc.rightsUniversity of Calgary graduate students retain copyright ownership and moral rights for their thesis. You may use this material in any way that is permitted by the Copyright Act or through licensing that has been assigned to the document. For uses that are not allowable under copyright legislation or licensing, you are required to seek permission.
dc.subjectself-care
dc.subjectphenomenography
dc.subjectundergraduate immigrant nursing students
dc.subject.classificationNursing
dc.titleViews on Self-Care by Immigrant Undergraduate Nursing Students: A Phenomenographic Study
dc.typemaster thesis
thesis.degree.disciplineNursing
thesis.degree.grantorUniversity of Calgary
thesis.degree.nameMaster of Nursing (MN)
ucalgary.thesis.accesssetbystudentI do not require a thesis withhold – my thesis will have open access and can be viewed and downloaded publicly as soon as possible.

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