| Literature DB >> 25538938 |
Mary Odum1, Matthew Lee Smith2, E Lisako J McKyer3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate African-American fathers' (AAF) perceptions regarding the applicability and need for their involvement as a health connection for their children and describe how participating fathers' behavior was affected by their attitudes, knowledge, and perceptions of their influence on their children's health.Entities:
Keywords: African-American fathers; child health; health education; paternal perspectives; qualitative
Year: 2014 PMID: 25538938 PMCID: PMC4258883 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2014.00276
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Participant characteristics.
| Participants ( | |
|---|---|
| Age in years (SD) | 37 (11.79) |
| Employment status (%) | |
| Employed full- or part-time | 65 |
| Marital status (%) | |
| Married | 55 |
| Single | 30 |
| Divorced | 15 |
| Education (%) | |
| High school graduate | 30 |
| Some college | 25 |
| College graduate | 20 |
| Residency status (%) | |
| Child living in home full-time | 55 |
| Child living in home part-time | 20 |
Select questions from semi-structured interview guide.
| What health topics do you talk about with your child(ren)? |
| 1.1 What made you bring up those topics? |
| Give me an example of a health discussion that you spoke to your kids about that took place between you and your child(ren) |
| Do you think your child has learned any health behaviors from watching you? |
| Are there certain topics that only you should discuss with your child? |
| Is there any topic that you anticipate talking to your child about that you have not yet? |
| Who do you think influences your child as far as health behavior goes? |
| Who do you think should be responsible for talking to your kids about health topics? |
Themes, subthemes, and subtheme code frequencies.
| # codes | |
|---|---|
| Theme #1: appropriate health education for their children | |
| Health education should come from parents | 69 |
| Health information from other sources should be distrusted (including medical establishment) | 60 |
| Health information taught to children was largely based in personal/familial experience | 157 |
| Theme #2: parental guidance approach | |
| Conscious of setting positive, healthy examples for their children | 49 |
| Guidance approach strongly rooted in personal experience | 85 |
| Guidance related to health education was reactive in nature | 65 |
| Health behaviors were reinforced through discipline | 10 |
| Paternal role viewed as both protector and teacher | 59 |
| Guidance approach influenced by religious beliefs | 22 |
| Theme #3: constraints on parent-child health communication | |
| Perceived gender roles: only men can talk to boys and women can talk to girls about sex and puberty (unless same-sex parent is unavailable) | 110 |
| Need to be subversive/sneaky: fathers worried about being hypocrites in their own diet, drinking, or smoking habits | 39 |
| Low paternal self-efficacy about ability to deliver age-appropriate health education appropriate for their children | 34 |
| Children’s unhealthy food preferences seemed unbeatable | 18 |
| Schedules and geographic distance: hectic schedules and non-residency left little time to talk with children | 17 |
| Theme #4: most relevant/important health topic for their children | |
| Diet | 57 |
| Physical activity | 27 |
| Sexual activity | 21 |
| Alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs | 19 |
| Relationships | 14 |
| Violence | 13 |
| Personal Hygiene | 10 |
| Obesity | 5 |