生殖正义与黑人生活:公共卫生护理的概念分析。

Public Health Nursing (Boston, Mass.) Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-05-10 DOI:10.1111/phn.12919
Kathryn Burger, Robin Evans-Agnew, Susan Johnson
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引用次数: 7

摘要

背景:美国孕产妇死亡率的不平等是对黑人妇女的一种结构性暴力。生殖正义的概念在社会科学中已被采用了近30年,但在促进母婴健康方面,护理部门在采用这一概念方面进展缓慢。目的:分析同行评议出版物中使用的生殖正义概念,旨在重塑黑人孕产妇健康在公共卫生护理学术、研究、实践和倡导中的地位。设计:我们对社会科学文献进行了系统的回顾。我们通过以认识论、语用、语言和逻辑原则为重点的基于原则的概念分析来分析选定的文章。样本:从377篇文章中选出8篇。结果:种族被确定为通过个人知识、集体知识和实践来理解生殖正义的力量来源。实际上,生殖正义是一个以社会正义为导向的平台,它弥合了支持选择/反对生命的鸿沟;艾滋病联盟建设;并促进包容。在语言上,这一概念不同于生殖健康和生殖权利。生殖正义在逻辑上处于交叉性理论和黑人妇女所经历的基于种族、阶级和性别的压迫的累积体现之中。结论:生殖正义通过揭露压迫制度,认识过去的历史不公正,促进健康促进中的文化安全,重新定义了黑人妇女的公共卫生护理行动。需要采取多层次的干预措施,以同时解决这些不公正现象,特别是在孕前保健、孕产妇保健、婴儿和儿童保健以及整个生殖寿命期间黑人家庭福祉等领域。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reproductive justice and black lives: A concept analysis for public health nursing.

Background: Inequities in maternal mortality in the United States are a form of structural violence against Black women. The concept of reproductive justice has been employed in the social sciences for almost 30 years, yet nursing has been slow to adopt this concept in promoting maternal-child health.

Objective: To analyze the concept of reproductive justice as used in peer-reviewed publications with the aim of reframing black maternal health in public health nursing scholarship, research, practice, and advocacy.

Design: We conducted a systematic review of the social science literature. We analyzed selected articles though a principle-based concept analysis focusing on epistemological, pragmatic, linguistic, and logical principles.

Sample: Eight articles were selected from a pool of 377.

Results: Race was identified as a source of power for understanding reproductive justice through individual knowledge, collective knowledge, and praxis. Pragmatically, reproductive justice is a social justice-oriented platform that bridges the pro-choice/pro-life divide; aids coalition building; and promotes inclusion. Linguistically, the concept is distinct from both reproductive health and reproductive rights. Reproductive justice is logically situated within intersectionality theory and the cumulative embodiment of oppressions Black women experience based on race, class, and gender.

Conclusion: Reproductive justice reframes public health nursing actions for Black women by focusing on uncovering systems of oppression, recognizing past historical injustices, and advancing cultural safety in health promotion. Multilevel interventions are needed to simultaneously address these injustices particularly in the areas of preconception health, maternal health, infant and child health, and Black family well-being across the reproductive lifespan.

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