Protecting hearth and health select="/dri:document/dri:meta/dri:pageMeta/dri:metadata[@element='title']/node()"/>

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dc.contributor.advisor Voda Ann M en_US
dc.contributor.author Leuning Cheryl Joy en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2013-07-02T14:07:06Z
dc.date.available 2013-07-02T14:07:06Z
dc.date.issued 1992 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11070.1/2489
dc.description.abstract Abstract taken from Dissertation Abstracts International, vol 53, no 3, September 1992, p. 1293-B: en_US
dc.description.abstract The purpose of this study was to discover the processes Herero women in Namibia, southwest Africa, use to provision health and illness care for themselves and their families. An exploratory design, which incorporated grounded theory methods, participant-observation and ethnographic interviewing, was used to plan and carry out data collection and analysis throughout the study. Interviews with Herero women who were actively living health and illness care experiences were the primary source of data. Watson's theory of human care and the theoretical foundations of feminist scholarship affirmed the transpersonal nature of the research and guided the investigator in becoming part of the research process. Data collection and analysis strategies used to demonstrate rigor and trustworthiness of the research were: constant comparative analysis, theoretical sampling, prolonged engagement, and data triangulation en_US
dc.description.abstract Three major concepts, which illustrated Herero women's health care activities, emerged from the data: (1) Mediating Strength, (2) Confronting Fear, and (3) Palliating Suffering. By modifying and integrating major concepts, a substantive theory, Protecting hearth and health: Herero women's sacred calling and secret burden, was developed to explain how Herero women care for themselves and their families in contemporary Namibia. This theory describes gender-specific cultural practices related to health and illness care in Herero society, and explains how Herero women endure the burden health and illness care places upon them en_US
dc.description.abstract Findings from this research can be used as a basis for developing hypotheses and research questions for further study of Herero women's experience. Future research should focus on the following areas: (1) the impact of Herero women's protecting processes on family health; (2) the nature and degree of burden Herero women experience as protectors of hearth and health in the family; and (3) culturally specific nursing interventions designed to decrease Herero women's burden en_US
dc.format.extent 294 p en_US
dc.language.iso eng en_US
dc.subject Women en_US
dc.subject Ethnography en_US
dc.subject Household en_US
dc.subject Health en_US
dc.subject Herero en_US
dc.title Protecting hearth and health en_US
dc.type thesis en_US
dc.identifier.isis F099-199502130000000 en_US
dc.description.degree Place unknown en_US
dc.description.degree USA en_US
dc.description.degree University of Utah en_US
dc.description.degree Ph D en_US
dc.masterFileNumber 949 en_US


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