University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
Qual Health Res. 2020 Feb;30(3):391-408. doi: 10.1177/1049732319861381. Epub 2019 Jul 26.
It is crucial for refugee service providers to understand the family planning knowledge, attitudes, and practices of refugee women following third country resettlement. Using an ethnographic approach rooted in Reproductive Justice, we conducted six focus groups that included 66 resettled Somali and Congolese women in a western United States (US) metropolitan area. We analyzed data using modified grounded theory. Three themes emerged within the family planning domain: (a) concepts of family, (b) fertility management, and (c) unintended pregnancy. We contextualized these themes within existing frameworks for refugee cultural transition under the analytic paradigms of "pronatalism and stable versus evolving family structure" and "active versus passive engagement with family planning." Provision of just and equitable family planning care to resettled refugee women requires understanding cultural relativism, social determinants of health, and how lived experiences influence family planning conceptualization. We suggest a counseling approach and provider practice recommendations based on our study findings.
对于难民服务提供者来说,了解第三国重新安置后难民妇女的计划生育知识、态度和实践至关重要。我们采用扎根于生殖正义的民族志方法,在美国西部一个大都市区进行了六次焦点小组讨论,共有 66 名重新安置的索马里和刚果妇女参加。我们使用改良的扎根理论对数据进行了分析。在计划生育领域出现了三个主题:(a)家庭概念,(b)生育管理,(c)意外怀孕。我们在现有的难民文化过渡框架内,在“生育主义和稳定与不断发展的家庭结构”以及“积极与被动参与计划生育”的分析范式内,将这些主题置于分析范围内。向重新安置的难民妇女提供公正和公平的计划生育护理,需要了解文化相对论、健康的社会决定因素,以及生活经历如何影响计划生育概念化。我们根据研究结果提出了一种咨询方法和提供者实践建议。