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Sociospatial knowledge networks: Appraising community as place

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TLDR
The geographical approach to understanding health beliefs and knowledge and how people acquire health information presented here is one that could serve other communities and community health practitioners working to improve chronic disease outcomes in diverse local environments.
Abstract
This article introduces a new theory of geographical analysis, sociospatial knowledge networks, for examining and understanding the spatial aspects of health knowledge (i.e., exactly where health beliefs and knowledge coincide with other support in the community). We present an overview of the theory of sociospatial knowledge networks and an example of how it is being used to guide an ongoing ethnographic study of health beliefs, knowledge, and knowledge networks in a rural community of African Americans, Latinos, and European Americans at high risk for, but not diagnosed with, type 2 diabetes mellitus. We believe that the geographical approach to understanding health beliefs and knowledge and how people acquire health information presented here is one that could serve other communities and community health practitioners working to improve chronic disease outcomes in diverse local environments.

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Citations
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Mapping nurse mobility in Canada with GIS: career movements from two Canadian provinces.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a Geographical Information System (GIS) to map the movement of 199 nurses from two Canadian provinces where they were educated - Manitoba and Newfoundland - to the province where they currently live and work.

Mapping Nurse Mobility in Canada with GIS: Career Movements from Two Canadian Provinces

TL;DR: The authors of this paper used a Geographical Information System (GIS) to map the movement of 199 nurses from two Canadian provinces where they were educated - Manitoba and Newfoundland - to the province where they currently live and work, and show that nurses who move tend to move to nearby provinces.

Not Dead Yet: The Spectre of Nursing Human Resource Shortages

TL;DR: The authors revisited the problem of nursing human resources from the standpoint of labour mobility and found that the problem has been sleeping in Canada, as many decision-makers and policy makers seem to believe that we have addressed this by increasing the number of nursing seats in undergraduate nursing programs.
References
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Book

Space, Place and Gender

Doreen Massey
TL;DR: Massey as discussed by the authors rastrea el desarrollo de ideas sobre la estructura social del espacio y el lugar, and the relacion of ambos con cuestiones de genero and ciertos debates dentro del feminismo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Place and Health: Towards a Reformed Medical Geography∗

TL;DR: This reformed medical geography will analyze issues such as the consequences of illness and health service provision for both personal well-being and the collective experience of place by communities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lourdes: healing in a place of pilgrimage

TL;DR: The authors examines the factors which have contributed to Lourdes' attraction for millions as a place of healing: the religious pilgrimage tradition, Lours' central role in political, economic, social, and cultural changes in France; belief in miraculous cures reported at Lourde; and the pilgrim experience.
Journal ArticleDOI

Space in its place: Developing the link in medical geography

TL;DR: It is argued that advancing a recursive understanding of space and place is an appropriate direction in medical geography, which will include both an understanding of the ways in which space shapes the character of places and how the particularities of places resist or set in motion (orthodox) spatial processes.
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