社论

IF 1.1 Q3 FAMILY STUDIES
Menka Tsantefski, A. Morrison
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本期《实践中的儿童保育》确立了该杂志的目标,即突出经常被忽视的主题,而这些主题矛盾地引起了全球的兴趣。本版首先关注发展中国家的医疗保健。这些论文的重点多种多样,包括一系列研究方法,包括利用半结构化访谈和焦点小组、调查和大规模行政数据进行的定性研究。综合起来,这些论文证明了社会经济因素和基础设施缺乏对婴儿和儿童不良结果的影响。获得服务的机会有限、文化因素以及重要他人在父母决策中的作用表明了社区发展的价值,以及需要在儿童及其家庭所处的更广泛的社会背景下考虑儿童。这些研究为有关儿童安全和福祉的公共卫生政策和做法提供了证据基础。对儿童长期健康和发展轨迹的影响不仅限于研究环境——儿童贫困是儿童结果的结构性决定因素,以及专业人员需要理解育儿做法的差异——这些差异跨越了国际管辖范围,对发展中国家和经济发达国家的儿童服务专业人员都有影响。本版的第一篇文章讨论了一个主要的全球健康问题——儿童在家中意外受伤导致的发病率、残疾和死亡率。Alrimawi等人(2021)利用自然调查和最大变异抽样,探讨巴勒斯坦初级保健专业人员(n=24)对拉马拉五岁以下儿童预防家庭伤害的因素的看法。研究结果表明,职业、父母和环境因素都在可预防的伤害、残疾和死亡中发挥作用。一个突出的发现是,专业人员需要更多的培训和时间与家庭接触并对其进行教育。此外,低收入也阻碍了父母为儿童创造更安全环境的能力。这篇文章可能是第一篇报道巴勒斯坦卫生保健专业人员预防意外儿童伤害观点的定性研究,对文献做出了重大贡献。Adonteng Kissi(2021)的以下文章探讨了加纳童工的复杂性和紧张关系。这项探索性研究基于对子女曾经或没有从事童工劳动的父母的半结构化访谈,考虑了加纳农村和城市社区的父母在多大程度上将童工视为文化或经济必需品。研究表明,不应孤立地考虑文化影响和经济必需品,预防和干预工作需要解决这些因素的相互关系。这些知识对儿童福利专业人员来说很重要,他们需要了解影响加纳父母养育方式的文化习俗,以及他们对童工的态度,以便相应地设计养育框架和干预措施,而不是依赖西方方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editorial
This edition of Child Care in Practice builds the journal’s aim of highlighting often-neglected topics that are, paradoxically, of global interest. The edition commences with attention to health care in developing countries. These papers are diverse in focus and include a range of research approaches including qualitative studies utilising semi-structured interviews and focus groups, surveys, and large-scale administrative data. Combined, the papers demonstrate the effects of socioeconomic factors and lack of infrastructure on poor outcomes among infants and children. Limited access to services, cultural factors and the role of significant others in parental decision-making point to the value of community development and the need to consider children in the wider social context in which they, and their families, are embedded. The studies contribute to the evidence base for public health policies and practices in relation to children’s safety and well-being. The implications for children’s long-term health and developmental trajectories are not limited to the study settings—child poverty as a structural determinant in child outcomes, and the need for professionals to comprehend differences in childrearing practices—which cut across international jurisdictions and are of consequence for the range of professionals concerned with children’s services in both developing and economically developed nations. The first article in this edition addresses a major global health concern—morbidity, disability and mortality resulting from unintentional child injury in the home. Alrimawi et al. (2021) utilised naturalistic inquiry and maximum variation sampling to explore the perceptions of Palestinian primary healthcare professionals (n = 24) on factors facilitating or impeding the prevention of home injuries among children aged under five years in Ramallah. The findings indicate that professional, parental and environmental factors all play a role in preventable injury, disability and death. The specific need for more training and time for professionals to engage with and educate families was a salient finding. Additionally, low income was found to impede parental ability to create a safer environment for children. As possibly the first qualitative study reporting Palestinian health-care professionals’ perspectives of prevention of unintended child injury, the article makes a significant contribution to the literature. The following article, by Adonteng-Kissi (2021), examines the complexities and tensions of child labour in Ghana. This exploratory study, based on semi-structured interviews with parents whose children were or were not involved in child labour, considers the extent to which parents in rural and urban communities in Ghana view child labour as cultural or as an economic necessity. The study demonstrates that cultural influences and economic necessities should not be considered in isolation and that prevention and intervention efforts need to address the interrelatedness of these factors. This knowledge is important for child welfare professionals who need to understand the cultural practices that affect parenting styles of Ghanaian parents, and their attitudes to child labour, in order to design parenting frameworks and interventions accordingly, rather than relying on Western approaches.
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来源期刊
Child Care in Practice
Child Care in Practice Nursing-Community and Home Care
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.30%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: Child Care in Practice is a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal that provides an international forum for professionals working in all disciplines in the provision of children’s services, including social work, social care, health care, medicine, psychology, education, the police and probationary services, and solicitors and barristers working in the family law and youth justice sectors. The strategic aims and objectives of the journal are: • To develop the knowledge base of practitioners, managers and other professionals responsible for the delivery of professional child care services. The journal seeks to contribute to the achievement of quality services and the promotion of the highest standards. • To achieve an equity of input from all disciplines working with children. The multi-disciplinary nature of the journal reflects that the key to many successful outcomes in the child care field lies in the close co-operation between different disciplines. • To raise awareness of often-neglected issues such as marginalization of ethnic minorities and problems consequent upon poverty and disability. • To keep abreast of and continue to influence local and international child care practice in response to emerging policy. • To include the views of those who are in receipt of multi-disciplinary child care services. • To welcome submissions on promising practice developments and the findings from new research to highlight the breadth of the work of the journal’s work.
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