Literature DB >> 14759677

Lay voices on allergic conditions in children: parents' narratives and the negotiation of a diagnosis.

Sonja Olin Lauritzen1.   

Abstract

Allergic conditions can be seen as an increasing as well as debated health problem in Western societies, but lay notions and experiences of these conditions are still not fully understood. As much attention is given to prevention of allergic conditions in early childhood, for example as medical advice to parents of young children, it is of particular interest to look at lay understandings of allergic conditions in childhood. This study, carried out in Sweden, explores understandings of child allergy, drawing on interviews with parents of children under 6 years, in a period when the children are medically assessed. The interviews are analysed as illness narratives, with a focus on how the parents explain the child's illness. The analysis reveals a complex pattern. The parents on the one hand refer to a shared knowledge about causes to allergic conditions, such as factors in the physical environment, family life-style and genetic causes. On the other hand, this knowledge is re-appropriated and intertwined with the parents' own experiences of allergic conditions in the process of making sense of the illness in their own child. In their stories, the parents link a potential allergic condition in the child to their own identities as allergic or non-allergic persons and to their family illness history. Child allergy is in this sense constructed as a "family condition".

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Year:  2004        PMID: 14759677     DOI: 10.1016/S0277-9536(03)00328-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  3 in total

1.  Parsing the peanut panic: the social life of a contested food allergy epidemic.

Authors:  Miranda R Waggoner
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2013-05-06       Impact factor: 4.634

2.  Better breathing or better living? A qualitative analysis of the impact of asthma medication acquisition on standard of living and quality of life in low-income families of children with asthma.

Authors:  Wendy J Ungar; Tony Macdonald; Martha Cousins
Journal:  J Pediatr Health Care       Date:  2005 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 1.812

3.  Improving Drug Benefits for Children with Asthma: Results of a Multi-stakeholder Workshop to Build a Research Agenda.

Authors:  Wendy J Ungar; Michael Paterson; Shannon Cope; Anita Kozyrskyj
Journal:  Healthc Policy       Date:  2008-05
  3 in total

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