Paik Leslie
School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA.
Children (Basel). 2022 Jun 3;9(6):828. doi: 10.3390/children9060828.
Given the increasing prevalence of youths with chronic medical conditions and the racial, gender, and class disparities in health in the U.S., it is important to understand how families manage their youths' health condition during the transitional time of adolescence when parents and youths are renegotiating their respective roles and responsibilities related to that condition. This paper explores a relatively understudied factor to this fraught and often confusing process: family involvement in multiple institutions for both health and non-health related issues. Based on qualitative fieldwork with 33 families in New York City whose youths have chronic health conditions (e.g., diabetes, asthma, obesity), the paper shows how family multi-institutional involvement can sap family resources in often unexpected ways. This type of institutional involvement has greater implications for poor and minority families who are more likely to be compelled to participate in these organizations with less influence to shape their cases as opposed to middle class and white families. In sum, this paper provides a more nuanced perspective of parental involvement in youths' health management practices as a fluid evolving process shaped in part by family involvement in other institutions.
鉴于患有慢性疾病的青少年人数日益增多,以及美国在健康方面存在的种族、性别和阶层差异,了解家庭在青少年过渡时期如何管理其健康状况非常重要,在此期间,父母和青少年正在重新协商与该状况相关的各自角色和责任。本文探讨了这个令人担忧且常常令人困惑的过程中一个相对较少被研究的因素:家庭在健康和非健康相关问题上对多个机构的参与。基于对纽约市33个家庭的定性实地调查,这些家庭的青少年患有慢性健康状况(如糖尿病、哮喘、肥胖症),本文展示了家庭对多个机构的参与如何以通常意想不到的方式消耗家庭资源。这种机构参与类型对贫困和少数族裔家庭有更大影响,与中产阶级和白人家庭相比,他们更有可能被迫参与这些组织,却对塑造自身情况的影响力较小。总之,本文提供了一个更细致入微的视角,将父母参与青少年健康管理实践视为一个动态演变的过程,这一过程部分由家庭对其他机构的参与所塑造。