| Literature DB >> 34022870 |
Clara Isabel Posada-Abadía1, Carolina Marín-Martín2, Cristina Oter-Quintana3, María Teresa González-Gil4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Violence against women places them in a vulnerable position with regard to homelessness. Although sometimes invisible, women's homelessness is a complex reality shrouded in dramatic biographies that should be sensitively addressed to avoid revictimization.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptation; Gender-based violence; Homeless persons; Psychological; Single-case study
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34022870 PMCID: PMC8141249 DOI: 10.1186/s12905-021-01353-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.809
Script for the in-depth interview
| Objectives | Dynamic questions |
|---|---|
| To analyze homeless women’s perception of their experience of intimate partner violence and/or violence from men in their environment | What has your history of homelessness been like? How did you come to find yourself in this situation? To what extent do you think your experiences of violence might have influenced your homelessness? |
| To identify adaptation or coping strategies generated throughout their experience of homelessness | How have you coped with the different difficult situations and experiences you have gone through? What things have enabled you to be strong in the face of adversity and suffering? |
| To identify internal elements or external barriers that have an impact on the continuity of homelessness | What difficulties do you consider that, on a personal level, limit your chances of escaping from homelessness? What barriers do you think your environment puts in the way of escaping from homelessness? |
| To analyze the interrelationships between women’s perceptions of the causes and consequences of the violence they have suffered and their reinterpretations | How do you understand violence? How do you understand violence against women? How do you think violence has affected your life as a woman since you were a child until now? How do you relate to violence? How do you deal with violence? |
| To identify their demands for care to guide the planning of woman-centered interventions | To what extent do you feel that the support resources you have received throughout your life match what you needed at the time? What help would you have liked to have received to avoid becoming homeless? |
Source: authors' own creation
Preparation process for the second interview using photo-elicitation
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| The core element of the photograph depicts the standing figure of a strongly built middle-aged woman, dressed in simple summer clothes, a blue tank top, shorts and sneakers, with a backpack and loose hair. She poses for the camera inviting us to contemplate two artistic works in what looks like an exhibition room; one of them is hanging on the wall at the back, in a wooden frame. The other one is next to the woman on an easel, where four handprints can be seen, two in the upper half of the painting in red and the other two in the lower half in black. The woman seems to be very familiar with and have an intimate knowledge of these creations |
| How do you see art contributing to your own recovery process? |
| How do you feel when you create? |
| What do you understand by inspiration? |
| What do you understand by a recovery process? |
Source: authors' own creation. The image included in the table has been created by the participant in the context of the photo-elicitation
Script for the photo-elicitation interview
Source: authors' own creation. All images included in the table have been created by the participant in the context of the photo-elicitation
Iconographic and interview analysis
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| The image is of a rectangular work of art, hanging on a light green wall. It is evident that it has been hand-painted with a paintbrush. There are two equally-sized flowers which occupy more than half of the work, one above the other, both colored with blends of blue and white, and with thin branches of the stems crossing each other, and with irregularly-shaped sky blue horizontally-oriented strokes. The background is grey with sky blue and yellow dots |
| “They’re my two kids. Yes, C and V yes, that’s right, I see them as transparent and I can’t have them, I don’t know what to do! And that’s what it is, a pain I bear with me.” |
| “As a mother, a mother in pain, I am in pain because I cannot have them, nor my grandchildren, nor kiss them, nor play with them, nor tell my children [anything]; things like that are hard and I think I will go to the grave without being with my children… but I can’t… if that happens to me I’d be defeated.” |
| “The girl has disengaged from me, and the boy just the same! […] … This is very hard! I mean, she has a different mindset in another culture; of course, it’s been many years now… I haven’t enjoyed anything [of them] nor have I enjoyed [motherhood]. They are the children that have been ripped out! They were ripped out of me by the people who brought me here… […]” |
| “My children weren’t the fruit of love, they were fruit of rape […]” |
Source: authors' own creation. The image included in the table has been created by the participant in the context of the photo-elicitation