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Maternal Navigational Strategies: Examining Mother-Daughter Dyads in Adolescent Families of Color
14
Citations
29
References
2010
Year
Family MedicineFamily InvolvementMother-daughter RelationshipsTeenage PregnancyAdolescent FamiliesSocial SciencesRaceFamily StudiesFamily HealthFamily RelationshipGender StudiesFamily InteractionAfrican American StudiesYouth Well-beingPublic HealthFamily RelationshipsChild Well-beingMaternal Navigational StrategiesIntersectionalityHealth PromotionMaternal HealthNurse-family PartnershipChild DevelopmentNursingMother-daughter DyadsNarrative ProfilesDaughter Reverse ProtectionFamily Dynamic
Mother-daughter relationships are critical to the health and well-being of adolescent girls. Understanding mothers' and daughters' perspectives on the relationship can inform health promotion strategies that may benefit both. In-depth semistructured interviews were conducted with mothers (N = 12) and their adolescent daughters (N = 16). Narrative profiles were constructed to identify participants' perceptions of each other and the relationship. Profiles were condensed into analytic poems that were compared and contrasted across roles and within and across dyads. Maternal navigational strategies of protection and preparation, and subthemes of maternal self-protection and daughter reverse protection emerged. The fabric of maternal strategies changed by girls' developmental stage, with mothers of older daughters describing an interweaving of protection and preparation. Suggestions for future family nursing and health promotion research and campaigns are provided.
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