Dias Janice Johnson, Whitaker Robert C
Department of Sociology, City University of New York/John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York, NY 10019, USA.
J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2013 Feb;24(1):206-19. doi: 10.1353/hpu.2013.0018.
Using narratives of single low-income Black mothers with preadolescent children in a high-crime neighborhood in Newark, New Jersey, this study aims (1) to understand if and how neighborhood safety influences mothers' decisions about allowing their daughters to play outdoors and (2) to identify what neighborhood changes would need to occur to alter their perceptions about safety. Mothers reported that unpredictable violence, related to drug and gang activity of neighbors, and the absence of safe play areas in their neighborhood led them to sequester their daughters indoors. Hostile neighborhood conditions contributed to children's physical inactivity and put girls at risk for obesity.
本研究以新泽西州纽瓦克市一个高犯罪率社区中育有青春期前子女的低收入黑人单身母亲的经历为样本,旨在:(1)了解社区安全是否以及如何影响母亲们关于允许女儿在户外玩耍的决定;(2)确定社区需要发生哪些变化才能改变她们对安全的认知。母亲们表示,邻居的毒品和帮派活动引发的不可预测的暴力,以及社区缺乏安全的玩耍区域,导致她们将女儿留在室内。恶劣的社区环境导致孩子们缺乏体育活动,使女孩面临肥胖风险。