Sex Talk: A Multiple Case Study to Explore and Understand Parent-Child Sexual Health Communication in Chinese Immigrant Families


Autoria(s): Brown, Sabrina
Contribuinte(s)

Applied Health Sciences Program

Data(s)

07/02/2012

07/02/2012

07/02/2012

Resumo

Parent-child sexual health communication can be beneficial. Many factors affect such communication in Chinese immigrant families. This qualitative study explored the influences of acculturation, parenting, and parental participation in the Raising Sexually Healthy Children Program (RSHC) on such communication. With a hermeneutic framework, the purpose was to develop understanding based on the topic, context, and researcher interpretations. Twelve interviews elicited data from six parent-child dyads, three from the RSHC. Analysis involved coding processes; data were compared repeatedly and organized into themes. Perceived personality differences between generations were confounded with cultural communicative differences. Parents used implicitness observed in Chinese culture to establish "open" communication; children expected explicitness observed in Western culture. Post- RSHC, parents perceived themselves as more open to talking about sex; children did not perceive such parental changes. Future research should include joint interviews and longitudinal program evaluation. Future practice should focus on cross-cultural communication and involving children in RSHC.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10464/3910

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Brock University

Palavras-Chave #sexual health, parent-child communication, Chinese immigrants, acculturation, parenting, personality differences, communicative differences
Tipo

Electronic Thesis or Dissertation