1.Adaptation Experience to Family of Immigrant Women in Multicultural Families.
Jin Hyang YANG ; Hyun Joo PARK ; Song Soon KIM ; Eun Jeong KANG ; Sang Hee BYUN ; Ji Soo BANG
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2012;42(1):36-47
PURPOSE: This study was to explore adaptation experience to family among women who immigrated for marriage. Specific aims were to identify problems immigrant women face as family members and how they interact with other family members. METHODS: Grounded theory methodology was utilized. Data were collected from iterative fieldwork with individual in-depth interviews from 6 immigrant women as key informants, and 2 of their husbands and 2 of their mothers-in-law as general informants. RESULTS: Through constant comparative analysis, a core category emerged as "tearing down the wall in communicating". Causal conditions were feeling frustrated in one's expectations, differences in language and life style, differences in recognition, and perceptions of discrimination and prejudice. Strategies were learning the Korean language, learning Korean culture, managing stress, mediating differences between family members, and introspecting. Intervening factors were support systems, burdens of child-rearing, and the condition of one's health. Consequences were rooting oneself in one's family and accepting one's life as it is. CONCLUSION: Results of the study indicate that there is a need for nurses to understand differences in communication with family members among immigrant women and to provide information and emotional support to improve the adaptation of these women to their Korean families.
*Adaptation, Psychological
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Adult
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Emigrants and Immigrants/*psychology
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Family/ethnology/psychology
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Female
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Humans
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Interviews as Topic
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Marriage
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Parenting
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Social Support
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Women
2.Study on the quality of life and social support among people living with HIV/AIDS and their family members.
Li MA ; Dong-qing YE ; Guang-dong ZHANG ; Huai-guang QI ; Yi-lin HE ; Ai-xiang HU ; Wei JIN
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2007;28(3):254-257
OBJECTIVETo explore the quality of life and related social support among people living with HIV/AIDS with related factors.
METHODS331 people living with HIV/AIDS and 148 of their family members were selected using a typical sampling method. Questionnaires on general conditions, tables on history of infection, generic quality of life inventory-74 (GQOLI-74) and social support scale (SSS) were used.
RESULTSData from one-way analysis suggested that people living with HIV/AIDS and their family members with the different sexs, different villages and different cultural backgrounds had differences in GQOLI-74 scores (P < 0.05) while people living with HIV/AIDS with the different villages had differences in SSS scores (P < 0.05). Results from Multiple linear regression analysis revealed that being elderly and negative life events were negatively associated with social support (P < 0.05), while factors as more advanced educational background, harmonious neighborhood relationship and having bother pouring nature were the predictive factors (P < 0.05).
CONCLUSIONMany factors might affect dimensions of quality of life among people living with HIV/AIDS and their family members in rural areas of northern Anhui. Community care and social support of HIV/AIDS should still be greatly enhanced in the countryside of China. A community care mode based on family and neighborhood was expected to be developed.
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ; complications ; ethnology ; psychology ; China ; Cultural Characteristics ; Family Relations ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Quality of Life ; Social Support
3.Self-image and Social Support of Adolescents among the Korean-Chinese.
Wen Xiang CUI ; Sheng Ji JIN ; Kasil OH
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2005;35(7):1343-1352
PURPOSE: This study was designed to identify the degree of self-image and social support among Korean-Chinese adolescents and investigate the relationship between these variables. METHOD: A total of 621 Korean-Chinese adolescents in five middle schools in YanBian, China were recruited from March 1st to the 9th, 2005. Data was analysed using descriptive statistics, Pearson correlation coefficient, t-test, and ANOVA with the SPSS 11.5 program. RESULT: In Korean-Chinese adolescents, the total self-image score was statistically different for age, parents' education status, parents' job and living with parents. In the 12 subscales, scoresof emotional tone, impulse control, sexuality, social functioning, vocational attitudes and self-reliance had significant differences between groups regarding gender. The total self-image was in the average range. However, areas of mental health and family function were lower than average and the scale of idealism washigher than average. The adolescents perceived parent's support was higher then friend's support. There was a positive correlation between self-image and social support. CONCLUSION: The findings suggest there is a need to examine self-image and social support of Korean- Chinese adolescents according to their parents' marital status and a need to develop a program to help these broken family's adolescents.
Socioeconomic Factors
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*Social Support
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*Self Concept
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Male
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Korea
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Humans
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Female
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Family
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China/ethnology
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Child
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*Adolescent Psychology
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Adolescent
4.Study on the relationship between family-related factors and obesity of children and adolescents aged 6-17 years.
D LIU ; H Y FANG ; L Y ZHAO ; D M YU ; J M LONG ; W H ZHAO
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2018;39(6):720-723
Objective: To analyze the relationship between family-related factors and the status of overweight and obesity in children and adolescents aged 6-17 years in China. Methods: Data were collected from the China National Nutrition and Health Surveillance in 2010-2012 program. A sample of 6 343 subjects aged 6-17 years was selected, with matched weight, education levels, household income and other family related factors of their parents. Univariate analysis and multivariate logistic regression were used to explore the relationship between family factors and overweight and obesity in school-aged children and adolescents. Results: After adjusted for age, gender and region, results from the multivariate logistic regression showed that both the overweight and obesity of children and adolescents were associated with maternal BMI (OR=1.83, 95%CI: 1.63-2.05), paternal BMI (OR=1.74, 95%CI: 1.57-1.94), mother's educational level (OR=1.24, 95%CI: 1.12-1.37) and household income (OR=1.30, 95%CI: 1.15-1.46). Conclusion: Factors as overweight or obesity status of the parents, mother's educational level and household income were positively correlated with the prevalence of overweight and obesity in Chinese children and adolescents.
Adolescent
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Body Mass Index
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Body Weight
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Child
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China/epidemiology*
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Cross-Sectional Studies
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Family/psychology*
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Family Characteristics
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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Obesity/psychology*
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Overweight/psychology*
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Parent-Child Relations
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Parents
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Pediatric Obesity/ethnology*
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Prevalence
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Schools
5.Discriminative Factor Analysis of Juvenile Delinquency in South Korea.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2006;36(8):1315-1323
PURPOSE: The present study was intended to compare difference in research variables between delinquent adolescents and student adolescents, and to analyze discriminative factors of delinquent behaviors among Korean adolescents. METHODS: The research design of this study was a questionnaire survey. Questionnaires were administered to 2,167 adolescents (1,196 students and 971 delinquents), sampled from 8 middle and high school and 6 juvenile corrective institutions, using the proportional stratified random sampling method. Statistical methods employed were Chi-square, t-test, and logistic regression analysis. RESULTS: The discriminative factors of delinquent behaviors were smoking, alcohol use, other drug use, being sexually abused, viewing time of media violence and pornography. Among these discriminative factors, the factor most strongly associated with delinquency was smoking (odds ratio: 32.32). That is, smoking adolescent has a 32-fold higher possibility of becoming a delinquent adolescent than a non-smoking adolescent. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings, that smoking was the strongest discriminative factor of delinquent behavior, suggest that educational strategies to prevent adolescent smoking may reduce the rate of juvenile delinquency. Antismoking educational efforts are therefore urgently needed in South Korea.
Adolescent
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Adolescent Behavior/*ethnology
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Adolescent Psychology
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Chi-Square Distribution
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Child Abuse, Sexual/ethnology
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Cross-Sectional Studies
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Discriminant Analysis
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Erotica/psychology
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Factor Analysis, Statistical
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Family/ethnology
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Female
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Health Education
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Humans
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Juvenile Delinquency/*ethnology/prevention & control/statistics & numerical data
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Korea/epidemiology
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Logistic Models
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Male
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Mass Media
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Questionnaires
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Risk Assessment
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Risk Factors
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Smoking/adverse effects/ethnology
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Students/psychology/statistics & numerical data
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Substance-Related Disorders/complications/ethnology
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Violence/ethnology
6.Khmer American Mothers' Knowledge about HPV and HBV Infection and Their Perceptions of Parenting: My English Speaking Daughter Knows More.
Haeok LEE ; Peter KIANG ; Shirely S TANG ; Phala CHEA ; Sonith PEOU ; Semira SEMINO-ASARO ; Dorcas C GRIGG-SAITO
Asian Nursing Research 2015;9(2):168-174
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to explore and describe Khmer mothers' understanding of HBV and HPV prevention as well as their perception of parenting on health and health education of their daughters in the US. METHODS: The qualitative pilot study guided by the revised Network Episode Model and informed by ethnographic analysis and community-based purposive sampling method were used. Face-to-face audiotaped interviews with eight Khmer mothers were conducted by bilingual female middle-aged community health leaders who spoke Khmer. RESULTS: The findings revealed that Khmer mothers clearly lacked knowledge about HBV and HPV infection prevention and had difficulty understanding and educating their daughters about health behavior, especially on sex-related topics. The findings showed that histo-sociocultural factors are integrated with the individual factor, and these factors influenced the HBV and HPV knowledge and perspective of Khmer mothers' parenting. CONCLUSIONS: The study suggests that situation-specific conceptual and methodological approaches that take into account the uniqueness of the sociocultural context of CAs is a novel method for identifying factors that are significant in shaping the perception of Khmer mothers' health education related to HBV and HPV prevention among their daughters. The communication between mother and daughter about sex and the risk involved in contracting HBV and HPV has been limited, partly because it is seen as a "taboo subject" and partly because mothers think that schools educate their children regarding sexuality and health.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Asian Americans/psychology
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Cambodia/ethnology
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Child
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Child Rearing/*psychology
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Communication
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Female
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*Health Education
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*Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
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Humans
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Middle Aged
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Mothers/*psychology
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Nuclear Family
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Papillomavirus Infections/*prevention & control
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Parenting/*psychology
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Pilot Projects
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Qualitative Research
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United States
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Young Adult