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From Their Own Response: Experiences of Korean Children with Chronic Illness and Their FamiliesFrom Their Own Response: Experiences of Korean Children with Chronic Illness and Their Families

Other Titles
From Their Own Response: Experiences of Korean Children with Chronic Illness and Their Families
Authors
박은숙오원옥석민현윤영미
Issue Date
2009
Publisher
한국아동간호학회
Keywords
Children; Chronic disease; Life experience; Children; Chronic disease; Life experience
Citation
Child Health Nursing Research, v.15, no.4, pp.350 - 358
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
Child Health Nursing Research
Volume
15
Number
4
Start Page
350
End Page
358
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/121238
ISSN
2287-9110
Abstract
Purpose: This study was done to better understand how sick children and their families define chronic illness; what behaviors they used for managing chronic illness; and how they perceived the socio-cultural context of Korea. Methods: This study was a secondary analysis of qualitative studies. Articles on children with a chronic illness and their families located in electronic databases were selected for review. Twenty one qualitative studies were reviewed. Qualitative studies that had used an analysis tool, the Family Management Style Framework were reviewed. Results: Children with chronic illness and their families tended to accept illness as a negative outcome and thought that they were deprived of the context of normality. In the traditional Korean family style, parents-in-law demand absolute obedience from their daughter-in-law, leading to a conflict between the two parties, which, in turn, may have negatively affected their perceptions of chronic illness. Western and oriental medical treatments were used, and participants sought an array of folk remedies. Conclusion: Culturally specific findings can help to better understand the difficulties faced by children with a chronic illness and their families and can provide invaluable input into the development of culturally appropriate and sensitive nursing interventions.
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