“今年不是负担最重的一年”——一项针对黑人女性产后经历的定性研究

IF 2.5 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH SSM. Qualitative research in health Pub Date : 2025-06-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-16 DOI:10.1016/j.ssmqr.2025.100536
Noelene K. Jeffers , Lauren A. Arrington , Ebony Marcelle , Erin C. Snowden , Lauren M. Aslami , Caitlin N. Mensah , Christina X. Marea
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摘要

越来越多的文献试图理解黑人妇女/分娩者的产后经历,特别是在美国黑人被结构性、政治和历史排斥的背景下。这份手稿的首要目标是探索黑人妇女的产后经历,种族主义如何影响产后一年,并为这些见解重新构想一种产后护理模式,使黑人分娩的人能够实现健康的愿景。我们进行了四个焦点小组调查,调查对象是23名在华盛顿特区大都会区自认是黑人的妇女,她们都在过去两年内生过孩子。参与者将产后时期特有的强烈压力归因于奴隶制的历史遗产、吉姆·克劳时代和持久的“坚强的黑人妇女”种族比喻。大多数参与者报告说,在未满足的护理需求中,只接受了一次产后护理访问。交通、最低限度带薪休假、拥挤和种族隔离的医疗体系等结构性障碍,导致人们觉得无法获得产后护理和健康。与医疗保健提供者的种族主义接触和对家庭警察的恐惧有时导致逃避护理,作为减轻伤害的一种手段,同时促使人们寻求种族和文化上和谐的护理。与会者还分享了她们如何抵制种族主义,同时也为母亲和孩子感到高兴。我们的研究结果表明,迫切需要重新构想产后护理,以解决历史背景的持久影响,种族主义的表现,以及产后被忽视的结构性方式,同时促进健康和快乐。
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“This year is not about carrying the heaviest burden”- a qualitative study on Black women’s postpartum experiences
There is a growing literature that seeks to understand Black women/birthing people’s postpartum experiences, particularly in the context of structural, political and historical exclusion of Black people in the United States. The overarching goals of this manuscript were to explore Black women’s postpartum experiences, how racism impacts the postpartum year, and for those insights to reimagine a model of postpartum care that enables Black birthing people to achieve that vision of wellness. We conducted four focus groups with 23 self-identified Black women in the Washington DC metropolitan area who had given birth in the prior two years. Participants attributed the intense overwhelm that characterizes the postpartum period to the historical legacy of slavery, the Jim Crow era, and the enduring “strong Black woman” racial trope. Most participants reported receiving only one postpartum care visit amidst unmet care needs. Structural barriers like transportation, minimal paid leave, and crowded and racially segregated healthcare systems contributed to feelings that postpartum care and wellness were inaccessible. Racist encounters with healthcare providers and fears of family policing sometimes led to care avoidance as a means of mitigating harm while simultaneously motivating attempts to seek racially and culturally concordant care. Participants also shared the ways in which they resisted racism while also rejoicing in mothering and child(ren). Our findings demonstrate an urgent need to reimagine postpartum care to address the enduring impact of the historical context, the manifestations of racism, and the structural ways that postpartum is neglected, while also promoting wellness and joy.
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