The Maternal Health Literacy of South Asian Newcomer Mothers and Canadian-born Mothers: A Narrative Inquiry Using Propositional Analysis

Dahlia Khajeei, Hannah T. Neufeld, L. Donelle, Samantha B. Meyer, Elena Neiterman, Jabeen Fayyaz, Megan Mack
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Abstract

Objective: First, this comparative analysis of comprehension aimed to guide care and assist with health education research and practice as indicated in mothers stories of learning. Second, this research aimed to determine the comprehension processes of participants by comparing and characterizing the quantity and quality of the concepts’ mothers use in their narratives. Maternal health literacy (MHL) allows mothers to apply health information across all healthcare settings to make decisions about their health. Comprehension and reasoning are essential MHL skills for applying health advice. Methods: Using narrative inquiry methodology and transformative learning theory as the lens, the comprehension processes of English-speaking South Asian Newcomer Mothers (SANMs) (n=7) were compared with those of English-speaking Canadian-born mothers (n=7). Through semi-structured interviews, the mothers discussed their comprehension of ultrasound examination preparation, health risk information, and shared decision making. Themes were identified using inductive thematic analysis, with two reviewers identifying latent themes concerning situational and sociocultural MHL practices. Then, excerpts were explicated using propositional analysis, which systematically identified the features of thought and behavior at an individual level, to identify semantic features of discourse comprehension as a form of methodological triangulation. Next, the narratives were quantified to identify latent patterns of comprehension processes, conceptual knowledge, and semantic discourse features. Results: The key findings indicated that mothers demonstrate MHL through reifying, posturing, and volition, and that all mothers engage in knowledge-building activities and experiential learning in their communities to learn relationally from each other. Conclusion: Ultimately, MHL empowers all mothers to become more engaged during medical appointments and in health decision making.
南亚新移民母亲和加拿大出生母亲的孕产妇保健知识:利用命题分析法进行叙事调查
目的:首先,本研究对理解能力进行了比较分析,旨在根据母亲们的学习故事,为护理工作提供指导,并协助开展健康教育研究和实践。其次,本研究旨在通过比较和描述母亲们在叙述中使用的概念的数量和质量,确定参与者的理解过程。孕产妇健康素养(MHL)使母亲们能够在所有医疗保健环境中应用健康信息,为自己的健康做出决定。理解和推理是 MHL 应用健康建议的基本技能。方法:以叙事探究方法和转化学习理论为视角,比较了说英语的南亚新移民母亲(SANMs)(7 人)和说英语的加拿大出生母亲(7 人)的理解过程。通过半结构式访谈,母亲们讨论了她们对超声波检查准备、健康风险信息和共同决策的理解。采用归纳式主题分析法确定主题,由两名审阅者确定有关情景和社会文化 MHL 实践的潜在主题。然后,使用命题分析法对节选内容进行阐释,系统地确定个体层面的思想和行为特征,以确定话语理解的语义特征,作为一种方法三角测量。然后,对叙述进行量化,以确定理解过程、概念知识和语义话语特征的潜在模式。结果主要研究结果表明,母亲们通过再认、姿态和意志表现出了多语言文化行为,而且所有母亲都参与了社区中的知识积累活动和体验式学习,以相互学习关系。结论:最终,MHL 能增强所有母亲的能力,使她们在就诊和做出健康决定时更加投入。
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