The childbearing beliefs and practices of pregnant Mexican-American adolescents living in Southwest border regions
The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship among different levels of acculturation on the childbearing beliefs and practices of pregnant Mexican American adolescents living in Southwest border regions. A descriptive correlational design was used in this study. Three instruments we...
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The University of Arizona.
1987
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2766432015-10-23T05:01:56Z The childbearing beliefs and practices of pregnant Mexican-American adolescents living in Southwest border regions Marshall, Sandra Gonzalez Kay, Margarita A. Mexican American teenagers -- Health and hygiene -- Texas -- Laredo. Mexican American teenagers -- Health and hygiene -- Texas -- El Paso. Mexican American teenagers -- Health and hygiene -- Arizona -- Tucson. Teenage pregnancy -- Texas -- Laredo -- Psychological aspects. Teenage pregnancy -- Texas -- El Paso -- Psychological aspects. Teenage pregnancy -- Arizona -- Tucson -- Psychologial aspects. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship among different levels of acculturation on the childbearing beliefs and practices of pregnant Mexican American adolescents living in Southwest border regions. A descriptive correlational design was used in this study. Three instruments were used to collect data. A total of 73 pregnant Mexican American adolescents participated in the study. The Laredo sample and the Tucson sample were identified as true bicultural samples. The El Paso group was identified as a Mexican-oriented bicultural sample. All geographical areas had an equal acceptance of traditional Mexican medicine and biomedical beliefs. Laredo and Tucson adolesents' beliefs in the traditional Mexican childbearing culture was directly related to their acculturation level. For the El Paso group, there was a low negative correlation which indicated that being more or less acculturated did not necessarily affect the adolescents' beliefs in the traditional Mexican childbearing culture. 1987 text Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/276643 21055430 1332973 .b17152148 .b17151727 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona. |
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language |
en_US |
sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
Mexican American teenagers -- Health and hygiene -- Texas -- Laredo. Mexican American teenagers -- Health and hygiene -- Texas -- El Paso. Mexican American teenagers -- Health and hygiene -- Arizona -- Tucson. Teenage pregnancy -- Texas -- Laredo -- Psychological aspects. Teenage pregnancy -- Texas -- El Paso -- Psychological aspects. Teenage pregnancy -- Arizona -- Tucson -- Psychologial aspects. |
spellingShingle |
Mexican American teenagers -- Health and hygiene -- Texas -- Laredo. Mexican American teenagers -- Health and hygiene -- Texas -- El Paso. Mexican American teenagers -- Health and hygiene -- Arizona -- Tucson. Teenage pregnancy -- Texas -- Laredo -- Psychological aspects. Teenage pregnancy -- Texas -- El Paso -- Psychological aspects. Teenage pregnancy -- Arizona -- Tucson -- Psychologial aspects. Marshall, Sandra Gonzalez The childbearing beliefs and practices of pregnant Mexican-American adolescents living in Southwest border regions |
description |
The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship among different levels of acculturation on the childbearing beliefs and practices of pregnant Mexican American adolescents living in Southwest border regions. A descriptive correlational design was used in this study. Three instruments were used to collect data. A total of 73 pregnant Mexican American adolescents participated in the study. The Laredo sample and the Tucson sample were identified as true bicultural samples. The El Paso group was identified as a Mexican-oriented bicultural sample. All geographical areas had an equal acceptance of traditional Mexican medicine and biomedical beliefs. Laredo and Tucson adolesents' beliefs in the traditional Mexican childbearing culture was directly related to their acculturation level. For the El Paso group, there was a low negative correlation which indicated that being more or less acculturated did not necessarily affect the adolescents' beliefs in the traditional Mexican childbearing culture. |
author2 |
Kay, Margarita A. |
author_facet |
Kay, Margarita A. Marshall, Sandra Gonzalez |
author |
Marshall, Sandra Gonzalez |
author_sort |
Marshall, Sandra Gonzalez |
title |
The childbearing beliefs and practices of pregnant Mexican-American adolescents living in Southwest border regions |
title_short |
The childbearing beliefs and practices of pregnant Mexican-American adolescents living in Southwest border regions |
title_full |
The childbearing beliefs and practices of pregnant Mexican-American adolescents living in Southwest border regions |
title_fullStr |
The childbearing beliefs and practices of pregnant Mexican-American adolescents living in Southwest border regions |
title_full_unstemmed |
The childbearing beliefs and practices of pregnant Mexican-American adolescents living in Southwest border regions |
title_sort |
childbearing beliefs and practices of pregnant mexican-american adolescents living in southwest border regions |
publisher |
The University of Arizona. |
publishDate |
1987 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/276643 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT marshallsandragonzalez thechildbearingbeliefsandpracticesofpregnantmexicanamericanadolescentslivinginsouthwestborderregions AT marshallsandragonzalez childbearingbeliefsandpracticesofpregnantmexicanamericanadolescentslivinginsouthwestborderregions |
_version_ |
1718102334492377088 |