在多个家庭世代和幼儿中进行暴力研究:南非混合方法试点研究的结果。

Hannabeth Franchino-Olsen, Nicola Christofides, Nataly Woollett, Ansie Fouche, Mpho Silima, Christina Thurston, Kopano Monaisa, Franziska Meinck
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文介绍了一项试点研究的结果,该研究的重点是在南非农村地区的三代样本中检查代际暴力,其中包括幼儿。试点研究的目的是调查参与者招募、同意和面试的可行性;研究问卷的长度和负担;所用措施的适当性和可接受性;以及幼儿(4-7岁)理解措施并有意义地参与询问暴力问题的采访的能力。数据由三组参与者收集,为期4个月,通常在家庭中(年轻人、他们的孩子和年轻人以前的照顾者),使用认知访谈、定量问卷和定性深入访谈。所有小组都参加了以艺术为基础的方法,儿童访谈包括视觉和触觉辅助。试点研究结果表明,在使用全面同意协议和强制性报告信息的三代研究中,在家庭中招募是可行的。成年人和幼儿能够在没有重大负担的情况下参加广泛的访谈(分别为2-3小时和1小时)。所采用的措施是适当的,并为环境所接受,尽管进行了细微的修改以提高对某些项目的理解。幼儿能够参与并有意义地参与这项研究,尽管他们无法在认知访谈中回答抽象推理项目,而发育不太发达的儿童需要更多的游戏和艺术来支持他们的参与。未来围绕暴力等敏感话题的研究在家庭中似乎是可行的,即使在资源匮乏的环境中,也包括幼儿作为参与者。补充信息:在线版本包含补充材料,网址为10.1007/s42448-023-00157-w。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Conducting Violence Research Across Multiple Family Generations and with Young Children: Findings from a Mixed-Methods Pilot Study in South Africa.

Conducting Violence Research Across Multiple Family Generations and with Young Children: Findings from a Mixed-Methods Pilot Study in South Africa.

This paper presents findings from a pilot study focused on examining intergenerational violence in a three-generation sample, which included young children, in a rural area of South Africa. The aims of the pilot study were to investigate the feasibility of participant recruitment, consent, and interviewing; length and burden of the study questionnaires; appropriateness and acceptability of the measures used; and young children's (age 4-7) ability to comprehend the measures and participate meaningfully in interviews asking about violence. Data were collected for 4 months with three groups of participants, often within families (young adults, their children, and the young adults' former caregivers), using cognitive interviews, quantitative questionnaires, and qualitative in-depth interviews. All groups participated in arts-based methods and child interviews included visual and tactile aids. Pilot study findings demonstrated feasible recruitment within families for a three-generation study using comprehensive consent protocols and mandatory reporting information. Adults and young children were able to participate in the extensive interviews (2-3 h and 1 h, respectively) without significant burden. The employed measures were appropriate and acceptable to the setting, though minor revisions were made to improve comprehension of certain items. Young children were able to engage and participate meaningfully in the research, though they were not able to answer abstract reasoning items in cognitive interviews and children who were less developmentally advanced required more play- and arts-based accommodations to support their participation. Future research around sensitive topics, such as violence, appears feasible within families and including young children as participants even in resource-poor settings.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s42448-023-00157-w.

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