Faculty of Health and Social Development, University of British Columbia, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2010 May 10;10:239. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-10-239.
Although researchers have focused on women's smoking during pregnancy and the postpartum period and the influence of household interactions on their tobacco reduction efforts, little attention has been given to parents' efforts to regulate smoking during the child-rearing years. The objective of this study was to examine how parenting young children and gender relations reflected in couple dynamics influence household tobacco use patterns and, specifically, women's tobacco reduction efforts.
As part of a longitudinal, grounded-theory study with 28 couples to examine the place of tobacco in the lives of new parents, each parent participated in one or two individual, semi-structured interviews during the first three years postpartum. Grounded theory methods and a gender relations framework were used to analyze transcribed data.
Two different parenting styles that couples adhered to were identified. These parenting styles reflected performances of femininities and masculinities, and were associated with particular smoking patterns. Traditional parenting reinforced by women's alignment with emphasized femininities and men's alignment with hegemonic masculinities placed women with smoking partners at risk for relapse. Women's actions to be supportive partners facilitated couples' continued smoking. In shared parenting dyads, egalitarian practices tended to support successful transitions to smoke-free homes. Women's ability to exert more influence around family decision making, and the acceptance of new masculine identities associated with fatherhood were influential. In non-smoking dyads where the mother, father, or both reduced or stopped smoking, we observed a subtext of potential conflict in the event either the mother or father relapsed.
Decisions about tobacco use are made within relationships and social contexts that vary based on each individual's relationship to tobacco, divisions of domestic labour and childcare, and other activities that impact tobacco use. Sensitive approaches to tobacco reduction for women and men must be developed building on greater understanding of gender relations and how tobacco use is integrated in spousal and parental roles.
尽管研究人员关注女性在怀孕期间和产后的吸烟行为,以及家庭互动对其减少吸烟努力的影响,但很少关注父母在育儿期间对调节吸烟行为的努力。本研究旨在探讨年幼子女的养育方式以及夫妻关系中反映的性别关系如何影响家庭吸烟模式,特别是女性的减少吸烟努力。
作为一项纵向、扎根理论研究的一部分,该研究共纳入 28 对夫妇,旨在探讨烟草在新父母生活中的地位,在产后的头三年内,每位父母都参加了一到两次单独的、半结构化的访谈。使用扎根理论方法和性别关系框架分析转录数据。
确定了夫妻双方坚持的两种不同的育儿风格。这些育儿风格反映了女性气质和男性气质的表现,与特定的吸烟模式有关。女性对强调女性气质的认同和男性对霸权男性气质的认同所强化的传统育儿方式,使与吸烟伴侣的女性处于复吸的风险之中。女性支持伴侣的行为有助于夫妻继续吸烟。在共同育儿的伴侣中,平等主义的做法倾向于支持向无烟家庭的成功过渡。女性在家庭决策中施加更多影响的能力,以及与父亲身份相关的新男性身份的接受程度,都具有影响力。在母亲、父亲或双方都减少或停止吸烟的非吸烟伴侣中,我们观察到,一旦母亲或父亲复吸,就会出现潜在冲突的潜台词。
关于烟草使用的决策是在关系和社会背景中做出的,这些关系和社会背景因每个人与烟草的关系、家务劳动和育儿分工以及影响烟草使用的其他活动而异。必须在更深入地理解性别关系以及烟草使用如何融入配偶和父母角色的基础上,制定针对男性和女性的敏感的减少吸烟方法。