Pediatric Environmental Specialty Unit, University Hospital Virgen de Arrixaca, Spain.
Rutgers - Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, 675 Hoes Lane West, Piscataway, NJ 08854, United States.
Midwifery. 2019 Nov;78:123-130. doi: 10.1016/j.midw.2019.07.017. Epub 2019 Jul 25.
To contribute in closing the current gap in literature that holistically examines sociocultural influences on perinatal drug dependency. This article draws from social network theory and structural violence to qualitatively consider the contextual components of addiction and substance use during pregnancy, which purposefully moves away from situating this issue from solely being within the contexts of pathologized disorders or products of social inequalities.
Face-to-face semi-structured interviews with drug-dependent pregnant women identified during a reproductive environmental health consultation.
Interviews were conducted at a university hospital in southeastern Spain between October 2015 and June 2016.
10 pregnant women with confirmed perinatal substance use and/or drug dependency.
The sociocultural perspective offers a useful lens by which providers can understand the reasons for initial substance use and progress of multi-drug dependency as way of individually tailoring intervention strategies for expecting mothers. This perspective draws from the frameworks of social network analysis (SNA) and structural violence to dialectically examine drug dependency in this unique patient population not to be solely an individual occurrence, but rather a combination of macro and micro-level factors at play.
The sociocultural approach in examining maternal health allows for the holistic exploration of the already taboo and symbolically paradoxical phenomenon of drug dependency in pregnant women.
The "Hoja Verde" and similar perinatal screening methods that comprehensively assess for the potential of environmental risks can be a key instrument in the practice of preventing developmental issues of children as early as pregnancy and into adolescence.
有助于弥合当前文献中的空白,全面研究社会文化因素对围产期药物依赖的影响。本文借鉴社会网络理论和结构性暴力,从定性角度考虑了怀孕期间成瘾和物质使用的背景因素,有意避免将这个问题仅置于病理障碍或社会不平等产物的背景下。
对在生殖环境健康咨询中发现的患有药物依赖的孕妇进行面对面的半结构化访谈。
2015 年 10 月至 2016 年 6 月在西班牙东南部的一所大学医院进行访谈。
10 名经证实有围产期物质使用和/或药物依赖的孕妇。
社会文化视角提供了一个有用的视角,使提供者能够理解最初物质使用的原因和多药物依赖的进展,从而为孕妇量身定制干预策略。这种观点借鉴了社会网络分析(SNA)和结构性暴力的框架,辩证地考察了这一独特患者群体中的药物依赖,不是将其仅仅视为个体现象,而是多种宏观和微观因素共同作用的结果。
在考察产妇健康时采用社会文化方法,可以全面探讨孕妇药物依赖这一已经禁忌且具有象征悖论的现象。
“Hoja Verde”和类似的围产期筛查方法可以全面评估环境风险的潜力,这是预防儿童从怀孕到青春期发展问题的关键手段。