COVID-19与非裔美国家庭的危机沟通。

Adaobi Anakwe, W. Majee, Monica L. Ponder, R. Belue
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:非洲裔美国人(AA)家庭因COVID-19造成的发病率和死亡率过高。如何将大流行的风险和影响传达给父母,进而传递给儿童,可能会对家庭心理健康产生影响。由于文化塑造了信息的接收、处理和利用方式,因此有必要了解AA父母在COVID-19信息共享和感知脆弱性方面的经历如何影响与孩子的沟通。方法采用半结构化深度电话访谈的方式,对11个有学龄儿童(5 ~ 17岁)的非裔美国家庭进行数据收集。行署名编码和专题分析用于从专业转录的数据中推断含义。初步发现:出现了对信息来源的信任、风险认知、对预防方法的态度和亲子风险沟通四个主题。尽管参与者对自己固有的脆弱性感到挑战,并以适当的理解水平向孩子传达COVID-19风险,但他们倾向于“餐桌”等文化安全网,以鼓励对话并培养韧性。了解有孩子的非裔美国家庭如何受到COVID-19的影响,以及充分的危机沟通如何有助于减轻不良健康后果,加强恢复,培养复原力,促进家庭和社区康复,这一点很重要。与AA家庭打交道的临床医生和治疗师在就突发公共卫生事件进行沟通时,应注意他们的社会脆弱性,并在文化上对AA家庭系统作出反应。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA,版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
COVID-19 and crisis communication among African American households.
BACKGROUND African American (AA) families are disproportionately burdened by COVID-19 resulting in morbidity and death. How pandemic risks and impacts are communicated to parents and in turn translated to children can have implications for familial mental wellbeing. Because culture shapes how information is received, processed, and utilized, there is need to understand how AA parents' experiences of COVID-19 information sharing and perceived vulnerabilities influenced communication with their children. METHODS Data was collected through semistructured in-depth telephone interviews conducted among 11 African American households with school aged child (5 to 17 years). Line-byline coding and thematic analysis were used to deduce meaning from professionally transcribed data. Preliminary Findings: Four themes on trust in information sources, risk perceptions, attitudes to prevention methods, and parent-child risk communication emerged. Although participants felt challenged by their inherent vulnerabilities and communicating COVID-19 risks at an appropriate comprehension level to their children, they leaned into cultural safety nets such as "the dinner table" to encourage conversation and foster resilience. IMPLICATIONS Understanding how African American families with children were impacted by COVID-19 and how adequate crisis communication can help mitigate adverse health consequences, strengthen recovery, foster resilience, and promote family and community healing is important. Clinicians and therapists who work with AA families should be sensitive to their social vulnerability and culturally responsive to AA family systems when communicating about public health emergencies. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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