College of Nursing, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Abigail Wexner Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Health Soc Care Community. 2022 Nov;30(6):e5038-e5046. doi: 10.1111/hsc.13919. Epub 2022 Jul 20.
Nearly 1 in every 14 youth have had a parent incarcerated at some point. In any given year, over 9 million adults from jail and 700,000 adults from prison return to their families and communities. However, few studies have explored the family experiences during re-entry or have provided suggestions on how to best support children during this time. The goal of this qualitative study was to describe family experiences and provide their considerations on how to better support children during the period of parent's re-entry. Qualitative data was gathered from 26 participants using semi-structured, in-depth phone interviews from March to August 2020. The sample included 10 youth (12-18 years) who have had a parent incarcerated, 10 custodial caregivers of youth who have had incarcerated parents, and 6 parents released from incarceration. Qualitative content analysis and open-coding procedures were used to determine themes across raters. Experiences centred on the challenges of assimilating to new family roles upon the parent returning home and to the community. Families also shared the difficulty in navigating parole restrictions and managing fears surrounding the recidivism of the parent. Three primary themes were deduced as relationship-building obstacles, unaligned family expectations and parole-related family burdens. Results from this study revealed suggestions that may address youth, caregiver and returning parent's needs during the re-entry phase. Family counselling and peer support groups may improve the process of mending or forming relationships. Access to re-entry programs, mental health services, and parental education may better align family expectations. Transparent wrap-around social services and decreasing legal challenges may reduce the parole-related burdens on the family.
近每 14 名青少年中就有 1 名父母曾被监禁过。在任何一年中,都有超过 900 万从监狱获释的成年人和 70 万从监狱获释的成年人返回他们的家庭和社区。然而,很少有研究探讨重新融入家庭的经历,也没有提供如何在这段时间为儿童提供最佳支持的建议。本定性研究的目的是描述家庭的经历,并就如何在父母重新融入期间更好地支持儿童提供建议。2020 年 3 月至 8 月,通过半结构化深度电话访谈,从 26 名参与者中收集了定性数据。样本包括 10 名(12-18 岁)有过入狱父母的青少年、10 名有过入狱父母的青少年的监护照顾者和 6 名从监禁中获释的父母。使用定性内容分析和开放式编码程序,由评分者确定主题。这些经历集中在父母返回家园和社区后适应新的家庭角色的挑战上。家庭还分享了在遵守假释限制和管理父母累犯的恐惧方面的困难。得出了三个主要主题,即建立关系的障碍、家庭期望不一致和与假释有关的家庭负担。这项研究的结果表明,在重新融入阶段,可能会有一些建议可以满足青少年、照顾者和回归父母的需求。家庭咨询和同伴支持小组可能会改善修复或建立关系的过程。获得重新融入计划、心理健康服务和父母教育可以更好地协调家庭期望。透明的综合社会服务和减少法律挑战可能会减轻家庭在假释方面的负担。