| Literature DB >> 12776543 |
Catherine Dingley, Gayle Roux.
Abstract
The phenomenon of inner strength has been studied in women with various chronic illnesses (Dingley, 1997; Dingley, Bush, & Roux, 2001; Koob, Roux, & Bush, 2002; Roux, Bush, & Dingley, 2001), demonstrating commonalities in the experiences that bridge the boundaries created by disease taxonomy or individual circumstance. Despite the richness of previous qualitative studies, the current state of the science reflects the interpreted reality of inner strength from the perspective of primarily middle class Caucasian women. Therefore, the purpose of this qualitative descriptive study was to explore the experience of inner strength in older Hispanic women living with chronic illness. The primary research question was: How do older Hispanic women experience inner strength as they live with chronic illness? The purposive sample consisted of women who met the criteria for the term "Hispanic", were 60 years of age or older, and had been diagnosed with a chronic illness. Data generation methods included observation and semi-structured interviews. Data analysis was based on qualitative methodology informed by grounded theory and the constant comparative method. Findings from the current study suggested the experience of inner strength in older Hispanic women involved the following interrelated dimensions: (a) Drawing Strength from the Past, (b) Focusing on Possibilities, (c) Being supported by Others, (d) Knowing One's Purpose, and (e) Nurturing the Spirit. The current study contributes to a cumulative program of research on the phenomenon of inner strength, furthering theory generation, cultural awareness, and future intervention studies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12776543
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cult Divers ISSN: 1071-5568