School of Arts and Humanities, Edith Cowan University.
J Fam Psychol. 2024 Oct;38(7):1029-1039. doi: 10.1037/fam0001260. Epub 2024 Jul 25.
COVID-19 has changed the world in many ways, and while some families were divided by geographical distances and mandatory "stay-at-home" orders during lockdowns, others became fractured owing to decisions about vaccination. This novel exploratory qualitative study questions how family systems and COVID-19 attitudes influenced the vaccine decisions of 10 Australian First Nations individuals. Despite the significance of family in decision making, the advice of respected family members became insignificant when nonvaccination resulted in the undesirable consequences of coercive government mandates. The thematic analysis identifies themes of choice, repeated wrongs of the past, trust, relationships, isolation, and parenting anxiety. It also demonstrates the resiliency of First Nations families, evident in the creative ways family systems adapted during the pandemic. This study has implications for governments and health service planning toward community COVID-19 support systems in a postpandemic context and provides ideas for further research into First Nations service provision during health crises. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
COVID-19 以多种方式改变了世界,虽然在封锁期间,一些家庭因地理距离和强制性的“居家令”而分隔两地,但另一些家庭则因接种疫苗的决定而破裂。本探索性定性研究探讨了家庭系统和 COVID-19 态度如何影响 10 名澳大利亚原住民个人的疫苗接种决定。尽管家庭在决策中的重要性,但当不接种疫苗导致政府强制命令等不良后果时,受尊敬的家庭成员的建议变得无足轻重。主题分析确定了选择、过去的错误重复、信任、关系、孤立和育儿焦虑等主题。它还展示了原住民家庭的弹性,这在大流行期间家庭系统以创造性的方式适应中显而易见。这项研究对政府和卫生服务规划具有意义,旨在为后大流行时期的社区 COVID-19 支持系统提供建议,并为在卫生危机期间为原住民提供服务的进一步研究提供思路。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2024 APA,保留所有权利)。