Beyond Birth Work: Addressing Social Determinants of Health With Community Perinatal Support Doulas

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING
Heather Rice, Cyleste Collins, Emily Cherney
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Abstract

Adverse maternal and infant health outcomes among African Americans are increasingly recognized as indicators of a critical public health crisis in the United States. Research has found that stress is related to structural racism and the social determinants of health (SDOH) that cause avoidable, unfair inequities in resources, education, power, and opportunities across ethnic groups. This paper describes the SDOH needs and experiences of pregnant Black women from the perspective of doulas and Birthing Beautiful Communities (BBC) clients. The design was a qualitative description, using data collected over time (2017–2018, 2020–2021, and 2023). This study took place in Cleveland and Akron, Ohio and the sample included 58 clients, 26 doulas, and 2 resource intake specialist assistants (RISAs). Qualitative data included individual client interviews, three doula focus groups, and one interview with two BBC RISAs. Three coders used content analysis to deductively identify SDOHs and calculate the number of interviews that contained information about specific SDOHs. Although the sample reported issues with all SDOH, particular ones caused a cascade of SDOH effects. Transportation issues, for example, impeded women from being able to make it to work, doctor’s appointments, and to purchase essential baby items (e.g., food, infant supplies). An inability to work—whether because of transportation challenges or pregnancy-related health complications—led to unstable housing and an inability to deal with transportation challenges. Many clients mentioned that housing was a major issue, with many clients experiencing housing instability. Implications include ensuring SDOH information is collected from a trusted source who can advocate and ensure access to a wide range of local resources, ensuring policies protect pregnant women from experiencing a cascade of SDOH that may contribute to continuing health disparate infant and maternal health outcomes in African American women.
超越分娩工作:与社区围产期支持人员一起应对健康的社会决定因素
非裔美国人的不良孕产妇和婴儿健康结果日益被视为美国严重公共卫生危机的指标。研究发现,压力与结构性种族主义和健康的社会决定因素(SDOH)有关,这些因素造成了不同种族群体之间在资源、教育、权力和机会方面可避免的、不公平的不平等。本文从助产士和 "美丽分娩社区"(BBC)客户的角度描述了黑人孕妇的 SDOH 需求和经历。本研究采用定性描述的设计,使用的是历年(2017-2018 年、2020-2021 年和 2023 年)收集的数据。这项研究在俄亥俄州的克利夫兰和阿克伦进行,样本包括 58 名客户、26 名朵拉、2 名资源接收专家助理(RISAs)。定性数据包括个人客户访谈、三个朵拉焦点小组以及一次对两名 BBC RISAs 的访谈。三位编码员使用内容分析法对 SDOHs 进行演绎识别,并计算出包含特定 SDOHs 信息的访谈次数。尽管样本报告了所有的 SDOH 问题,但特定的 SDOH 问题造成了一连串的 SDOH 影响。例如,交通问题阻碍了妇女上班、看医生和购买婴儿必需品(如食品、婴儿用品)。由于交通不便或与妊娠有关的健康并发症而无法工作,导致住房不稳定,无法应对交通挑战。许多受助者提到,住房是一个主要问题,许多受助者的住房都不稳定。其影响包括确保从可信赖的来源收集 SDOH 信息,该来源能够倡导并确保获得广泛的当地资源,确保政策保护孕妇免受 SDOH 的连环影响,这可能会导致非裔美国妇女的婴儿和孕产妇健康结果持续存在差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
5.90%
发文量
107
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Clinical Nursing Research (CNR) is a peer-reviewed quarterly journal that addresses issues of clinical research that are meaningful to practicing nurses, providing an international forum to encourage discussion among clinical practitioners, enhance clinical practice by pinpointing potential clinical applications of the latest scholarly research, and disseminate research findings of particular interest to practicing nurses. This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
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