Public Health Reports
Volume 100, Issue 3, 1985, Pages 340-343

Perinatal needs of immigrant Hmong women: Surveys of women and health care providers (Article)

Faller H.S.
  • a School of Nursing, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27834, United States

Abstract

The Hill People of Laos in Southeast Asia, who are called the Hmong, are from a primitive culture which has had a written language for only 31 years. By 1980, about 3,000 of them were living in Colorado, one of 9 States to which they had migrated. In an effort to determine whether or not local health care service was accessible and acceptable to child-bearing families, a pilot survey was conducted in the Denver area. The survey consisted of interviews of the Hmong women themselves and questions of area health care providers. The interviews proved to be both difficult and illuminating. They were difficult because of the language barrier, which required exclusive use of interpreters, and because of the diffidence of the women themselves, especially in discussing matters of sex and childbearing. Illumination came from learning Hmong customs and culture and some of the benefits of their version of self-care. It also came from whatever value may lie in applying this knowledge to other immigrant ethnic groups with comparable problems. Responses to quiestionnaires from the health care providers disclosed that, from their viewpoint, principal Hmong concerns were family planning and nutrition. They also revealed surprisingly few maternal or child deaths among the Hmong. There still exists a need for both cross-sectional and longitudinal studies to document the effect of migration on the Hmong.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

Short Survey cultural anthropology prenatal care psychological aspect methodology Laos human ethnic group social aspect priority journal geographic distribution Health Services Needs and Demand interview United States migrant health services research male Medicine, Traditional female organization and management nutrition Questionnaires ethnic or racial aspects Perinatal Care Interviews Emigration and Immigration family planning Self Care attitude to health Pilot Projects Colorado

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0021850246&partnerID=40&md5=8acf14a996850899c832db34a9f750ad

ISSN: 00333549
Cited by: 10
Original Language: English