University of Botswana, School of Nursing, Gaborone, Botswana.
Issues Ment Health Nurs. 2010 Jan;31(1):39-44. doi: 10.3109/01612840903408195.
A Heideggerian hermeneutic phenomenological approach was used to investigate the lived experience of women in Botswana who had experienced emotional abuse in intimate relationships. Hermeneutic phenomenology is concerned with the human experience as it is lived. Ten educated Botswana women who had formal employment and have been in intimate relationships for longer than ten years, narrated their life experiences with abusive men. Extensive interviews took place over a six month period. Sociocultural practices in Botswana emerged as salient factors that contribute to emotional abuse and predispose women to mental illness. Entwined in these cultural practices are issues of age, ethnicity, payment of lobola (bride price), financial standing, change of name, and relocation to the man's residence. Education and employment seem to worsen the abuse. Depression and anxiety are common results of abuse. Understanding how the sociocultural factors perpetuate abuse can assist nurses in the way they provide health care services to women.
采用海德格尔解释学现象学方法研究了在亲密关系中经历情感虐待的博茨瓦纳女性的生活体验。解释学现象学关注的是人类的生活体验。10 位受过教育的博茨瓦纳女性有正式工作,并且已经处于亲密关系超过 10 年,她们讲述了与虐待男性的生活经历。广泛的采访进行了六个月。博茨瓦纳的社会文化习俗成为导致情感虐待和使妇女易患精神疾病的突出因素。在这些文化习俗中交织着年龄、种族、支付嫁妆、财务状况、改名和搬迁到男方住所等问题。教育和就业似乎会使虐待恶化。抑郁和焦虑是虐待的常见后果。了解社会文化因素如何使虐待持续下去,可以帮助护士为妇女提供医疗保健服务。