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1.
Violence Against Women ; 17(12): 1576-600, 2011 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22410772

ABSTRACT

Access to safe and affordable housing is a key concern for women leaving abusive partners. Yet little is known about women's housing patterns around leaving. In this community sample, approximately equal numbers of women did not move, moved once, and moved two or more times during the transition period around leaving. Overall, moving patterns were associated with housing type and suitability, economic circumstances, and severity of violence. This study calls into question the tendency to equate leaving with moving, draws attention to the different housing patterns after leaving, and highlights the need to tailor housing supports to diverse women.


Subject(s)
Battered Women , Housing , Safety , Spouse Abuse , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Middle Aged , Sexual Partners , Socioeconomic Factors , Young Adult
2.
Nurs Inq ; 17(4): 324-35, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21059150

ABSTRACT

Feminist participatory action research integrates feminist theories and participatory action research methods, often with the explicit intention of building community-academic partnerships to create new forms of knowledge to inform women's health. Despite the current pro-partnership agenda in health research and policy settings, a lack of attention has been paid to how to cultivate effective partnerships given limited resources, competing agendas, and inherent power differences. Based on our 10+ years individually and collectively conducting women's health and feminist participatory action research, we suggest that it is imperative to intentionally develop power-with strategies in order to avoid replicating the power imbalances that such projects seek to redress. By drawing on examples from three of our recent feminist participatory action projects we reflect on some of the tensions and complexities of attempting to cultivate power-with research partnerships. We then offer skills and resources needed by academic researchers to effectively harness the collective resources, agendas, and knowledge that each partner brings to the table. We suggest that investing in the process of cultivating power-with research partnerships ultimately improves our collective ability to understand and address women's health issues.


Subject(s)
Community-Based Participatory Research/methods , Cooperative Behavior , Feminism , Power, Psychological , Women's Health , Domestic Violence , Emigration and Immigration , Employment , Female , Health Status , Humans , Patient Care Team , Prejudice
3.
Can J Public Health ; 101(3): 259-61, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20737822

ABSTRACT

Health promotion is a set of strategies for positively influencing health through a range of individual, community-based, and population interventions. Despite international recognition that gender is a primary determinant of health and that gender roles can negatively affect health, the health promotion field has not yet articulated how to integrate gender theoretically or practically into its vision. For example, interventions often fail to critically consider women's or men's diverse social locations, gender-based power relations, or sex-based differences in health status. Yet without such analyses, interventions can result in the accommodation or exploitation of gender relations that disadvantage women and compromise their health. In this paper, we seek to ignite an agenda for health promotion for women. We discuss the need for a conceptual framework that includes a sex-gender-diversity analysis and critically considers 'what counts' as health promotion to guide the development and implementation of evidence-based practice. We also consider how innovative knowledge translation practices, technology developments and action research can advance this agenda in ways that foster the participation of a wide range of stakeholders.


Subject(s)
Health Promotion , Women's Health , Diffusion of Innovation , Evidence-Based Practice , Female , Health Policy , Humans
4.
Qual Health Res ; 20(11): 1519-31, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20581075

ABSTRACT

Community-based health promoters often aim to facilitate "inclusion" when working with marginalized women to address their exclusion and related health issues. Yet the notion of inclusion has not been critically interrogated within this field, resulting in the perpetuation of assumptions that oversimplify it. We provide qualitative evidence on inclusion as a health-promotion strategy from the perspectives of women living in poverty. We collected data with women engaged in a 6-year community-based health promotion and feminist participatory action research project. Participants' experiences illustrated that inclusion was a multidimensional process that involved a dynamic interplay between structural determinants and individual agency. The women named multiple elements of inclusion across psychosocial, relational, organizational, and participatory dimensions. This knowledge interrupts assumptions that inclusion is achievable and desirable for so-called recipients of such initiatives. We thus call for critical consideration of the complexities, limitations, and possibilities of facilitating inclusion as a health-promotion strategy.


Subject(s)
Community-Based Participatory Research , Health Promotion/methods , Poverty/psychology , Women's Health , Adult , Aged , Canada , Female , Feminism , Humans , Middle Aged , Urban Health
5.
Sociol Health Illn ; 32(4): 583-96, 2010 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20163561

ABSTRACT

To further understand men's continued smoking during their partner's pregnancy and the postpartum period, a study was undertaken to explore women's perspectives of men's smoking. Using a gender lens, a thematic analysis of transcribed interviews with 27 women was completed. Women's constructions of men's smoking and linkages to masculine and feminine ideals are described. The findings highlight the ways women position themselves both as defenders and regulators of men's smoking. Femininities that aligned women with hegemonic masculine principles underpinned their roles in relation to men's smoking and presented challenges in influencing their partner's tobacco reduction. By positioning the decision to quit smoking as a man's solitary pursuit, women reduced potential relationship conflict and managed to maintain their identity as a supportive partner. Insights from this study provide direction for developing gender-specific tobacco reduction initiatives targeting expectant and new fathers. Indeed, a lack of intervention aimed at encouraging men's tobacco reduction has the potential to increase relationship tensions, and inadvertently maintain pressure on women to regulate fathers' smoking. This study illustrates how gender-based analyses can provide new directions for men's health promotion programmes and policies.


Subject(s)
Fathers , Interpersonal Relations , Smoking , Adult , British Columbia , Female , Harm Reduction , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Middle Aged , Sex Factors , Young Adult
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