School of Health and Population Sciences, University of Birmingham, 52 Prichatts Road, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK.
Ethn Health. 2012;17(1-2):89-103. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2011.645155. Epub 2012 Jan 11.
The findings presented in this article were unanticipated and came to light during a study which investigated African and African-Caribbean fathers' views about preventive primary care services. This article reports findings which indicate that African and African-Caribbean fathers strive to enable and protect children's mental well-being and create social, cultural and symbolic forms of capital. It also seeks to identify implications for health and social care policy and practice in England.
There is limited literature examining African and African-Caribbean fathers' health experiences in England. Consequently an exploratory research approach was required. This involved nine, in-depth, semi-structured qualitative group interviews undertaken with 46 African and African-Caribbean fathers. The data were analysed thematically using abductive reasoning, informed by Bourdieu's theoretical work.
Fathers were striving to enable and protect children's mental well-being through providing authoritative, loving, affectionate fatherhood involving reasoning, good communication and promoting self-esteem. These practices were seen to be necessary if children were to prosper in a harsh social world characterised by structural hazards including racism, negative stereotypes and limited opportunities. The fathers reported their efforts to develop what Bourdieu has termed symbolic, cultural and social capital as means of promoting the mental well-being of their children and the children of others.
The implications for theory, future research, public health policy and practice, in relation to the needs of African and African-Caribbean fathers and families, are also discussed, with specific focus on how to realise the potential of African and African-Caribbean fathers' positive contributions to family and community health.
本文呈现的研究结果出人意料,是在一项研究中发现的,该研究旨在调查非洲裔和非裔加勒比裔父亲对预防初级保健服务的看法。本文报告的研究结果表明,非洲裔和非裔加勒比裔父亲努力促进和保护儿童的心理健康,创造社会、文化和象征性的资本形式。它还试图确定对英格兰卫生和社会保健政策与实践的影响。
关于英格兰非洲裔和非裔加勒比裔父亲的健康体验,文献有限。因此,需要采用探索性的研究方法。这涉及对 46 名非洲裔和非裔加勒比裔父亲进行的九次深入的半结构化定性小组访谈。使用归纳推理对数据进行了主题分析,这是受布迪厄理论工作启发的。
父亲们通过提供权威、充满爱心、充满亲情的父爱来努力促进和保护孩子的心理健康,这种父爱包括推理、良好的沟通和培养自尊心。如果孩子们要在一个充满种族主义、负面刻板印象和机会有限等结构性危害的恶劣社会环境中茁壮成长,这些做法是必要的。父亲们报告说,他们努力发展布迪厄所谓的象征性、文化和社会资本,以此来促进自己孩子和他人孩子的心理健康。
还讨论了与非洲裔和非裔加勒比裔父亲和家庭的需求相关的理论、未来研究、公共卫生政策和实践的影响,特别关注如何实现非洲裔和非裔加勒比裔父亲对家庭和社区健康的积极贡献的潜力。