| Literature DB >> 26303942 |
Cecilia Benoit1, Samantha Magnus2, Rachel Phillips3, Lenora Marcellus4, Sinéad Charbonneau5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Consumption of substances is a highly controversial behaviour, with those who do so commonly viewed as deviants, even criminals, or else as out of control addicts. In other work we showed that the use of substances by women who are pregnant or have recently become parents was mainly viewed by health and social care providers as morally wrong. Problematic substance use was framed through the narrow lens of gendered responsibilisation, resulting in women being seen primarily as foetal incubators and primary caregivers of infants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26303942 PMCID: PMC4548907 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-015-0206-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Demographic data (N = 34)
| Demographic Profile (34 participants) | |
|---|---|
| Gender and Age | |
| Female | 26 (76 %) |
| Male | 8 (24 %) |
| Age (mean) | 29 years |
| Under 25 | 15 (44 %) |
| Ethnicity | |
| White | 15 (44 %) |
| Aboriginal | 17 (50 %) |
| Visible minority (non-Aboriginal) | 2 (6 %) |
| Education | |
| Completed grade twelve | 19 (59 %) |
| Currently enrolled in school | 6 (19 %) |
| Employment and Income | |
| Personal annual income (median) | $ 10,700 |
| Household annual income (median) | $ 12,000 |
| Currently employed | 3 (9 %) |
| Current recipient of income assistance | 23 (70 %) |
| Applied for income assistance and were turned down in the last 12 months | 7 (21 %) |
Competing discourses in in defining problematic substance use during pregnancy and early parenting
| Parallel/competing discourses | |
|---|---|
| Abstinence (as the ideal) | Autonomy (of individuals to make different choices based on their knowledge and experiences) |
| Characteristics | |
| ● ‘Obvious’ | ● Complex |
| ● Normative | ● Nuanced |
| ● Deontological/absolutist | ● Pluralistic |
| Informed/reinforced by… | |
| ● Moral conviction | ● Relative and contextualized harms |
| ● Traumatic/negative personal experience | ● Personal and anecdotal experience |
| ● Ministry policies/legal structures | ● Ambiguity of evidence |
| Sub-themes | |
| Internalizing a moralized motherhood | A broader view of what influences health |
| ● Delimits the ‘bad mother’ and the ‘good mother’ by substance use and child removal | ● ‘Problematic’ determined according to substance type and frequency of use |
| ● Neoliberal view of choice over life circumstances (choice for both substance use and pregnancy) | ● Harms mediated by social determinants of health associated with substance use and dependency |
| ● Harm reduction as morally inadequate | ● More holistic view of health: personal care, agency, and emotional health |
| ● Mother and infant health as inseparable | |
| ● Disruption of family as problematic | |
| Results in… | |
| ● Irreconcilable shame and guilt | ● Richer discussion of what influences health and child development |
| ● Stigmatization | ● Contestation of judgment and stigmatization |