Liddell Jessica L, McKinley Catherine E
School of Social Work, University of Montana, Jeannette Rankin Hall 004, 32 Campus Dr, Missoula, MT 59812, USA.
Tulane University School of Social Work, New Orleans, LA, USA.
Sex Res Social Policy. 2022 Sep;19(3):1020-1033. doi: 10.1007/s13178-022-00693-z. Epub 2022 May 21.
Indigenous women experience extensive reproductive health disparities and reproductive oppression. Theoretical frameworks for understanding the complex intersection of factors that contribute to these experiences are needed, especially those that highlight the resilience of Indigenous peoples throughout settler colonialism. The purpose of this article is to explore the empirical development of the Framework of Integrated Reproductive and Sexual Health Theories (FIRSHT) to contextualize and understand the reproductive and sexual health experiences of Indigenous women.
The FIRSHT was developed through a qualitative descriptive research study with 31 Indigenous women from a Gulf Coast tribe. Interviews were conducted in 2018 and 2019. The first author partnered with a community-advisory board throughout the research project, and in the dissemination of results to tribal members.
After presenting a snapshot of the overarching results, we discuss how the FIRSHT incorporates key components of the reproductive justice, resilience, Indigenous critical theory, life course and eco-systemic theoretical frameworks. The proposed framework conceptualizes the interrelationship of factors that impact women's reproductive and sexual health experiences.
This research fills a gap in the need for holistic understandings of Indigenous women's reproductive and sexual healthcare required for the development of interventions that not only address social justice issues and weaknesses in the healthcare system but also promote the existing strengths and resources in Indigenous communities.
This theoretical framework may be useful for researchers interested in studying the reproductive and sexual health experiences of Indigenous women, who desire a holistic and strengths-based framework.
原住民女性面临着广泛的生殖健康差异和生殖压迫。我们需要理论框架来理解导致这些情况的各种因素的复杂交织,尤其是那些凸显原住民在定居者殖民主义全过程中的复原力的框架。本文旨在探讨综合生殖与性健康理论框架(FIRSHT)的实证发展,以便将原住民女性的生殖与性健康经历置于具体情境中并加以理解。
FIRSHT是通过对来自墨西哥湾沿岸一个部落的31名原住民女性进行定性描述性研究而形成的。访谈于2018年和2019年进行。第一作者在整个研究项目以及向部落成员传播研究结果的过程中,与一个社区咨询委员会合作。
在呈现总体结果的简要情况后,我们讨论FIRSHT如何纳入生殖正义、复原力、原住民批判理论、生命历程和生态系统理论框架的关键要素。所提出的框架将影响女性生殖与性健康经历的各种因素之间的相互关系概念化。
这项研究填补了一项空白,即需要对原住民女性的生殖与性健康护理有全面的理解,以便制定不仅能解决社会正义问题和医疗系统缺陷,还能促进原住民社区现有优势和资源的干预措施。
这一理论框架可能对那些有兴趣研究原住民女性生殖与性健康经历、渴望有一个全面且基于优势的框架的研究人员有用。