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Korean Immigrant Women¡¯s Taekyo Practices in the United States as a Traditional Prenatal Self-care

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KMID : 0606420150210030241
ÀÌ°æÀº ( Lee Kyoung-Eun ) - Ewha Womans University Division of Nursing Science

Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore preserved belief system supporting Korean immigrant women¡¯s Taekyo practices and influencing factors while they observe the tradition within US sociocultural context.

Methods: Leininger¡¯s exploratory focused ethnographic approach was used. Semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with purposive sample of sixteen Korean immigrant women who gave birth in the US within last 6 months. Researcher¡¯s observation and reflective field notes were also integrated into the interview data. Leininger and McFarland¡¯s four phases of ethnographic analysis guided data analysis process.

Results: The perceived belief system supporting Taekyo practices included Taekyo as an enculturated Korean tradition, connecting parents with fetus, and positive impacts on fetal development. And Korean immigrant women¡¯s Taekyo practices were influenced by resources of information, woman¡¯s orientation toward Taekyo, pressure from local Korean community, and child order.

Conclusion: The findings from this research would serve as an important knowledge base to expand US health care providers¡¯ understanding of Korean traditional Taekyo practices observed by Korean immigrant women¡¯s as important prenatal self-care practices. The findings could also aid in providing more patient-centered and culturally-tailored prenatal care plan to Korean immigrant by including Korean traditional belief system supporting Taekyo practices.
KeyWords

Immigrants, Prenatal care, Pregnancy, Culturally competent care
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ÇмúÁøÈïÀç´Ü(KCI) KoreaMed