Family Support as a Care Resource among the Bena in the Tanzanian Village of Ilembula

This article aims to analyse family support as a care resource from a cultural perspective. The purpose of the study was to reflect on the cultural factors defining family support as a care resource among the Bena in the Tanzanian village of Ilembula. The data was collected through interviews, participant observation and personal working diaries. Sixty-one villagers were interviewed. The data was analysed using the inductive qualitative content analysis method. The findings show that the culturally defined characteristics of family support among the Bena in the village of Ilembula were maintaining integrity, moral responsibility, role division, and being present; while the main actions taken by families to support their ill relatives were succour and comfort. The characteristics and activities of family support reflected the worldview of the Bena, their family-centred values, cultural beliefs and the lack of a social security system in Ilembula. The study proved that family support is a meaningful part of care, reflecting the Bena's world view and their cultural values beside their socio-cultural conditions. The results can be exploited in the practice and teaching of transcultural nursing.

[1]  유창조 Naturalistic Inquiry , 2022, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design.

[2]  B. Tedlock,et al.  THE OBSERVATION OF PARTICIPATION AND THE EMERGENCE OF PUBLIC ETHNOGRAPHY , 2007 .

[3]  K. Schumacher,et al.  A Transactional Model of Cancer Family Caregiving Skill , 2006, ANS. Advances in nursing science.

[4]  C. Varcoe,et al.  The "hard spots" of family nursing: connecting across difference and diversity. , 2006, Journal of family nursing.

[5]  D. Burchard Ethos, Ethics, and Endeavors: New Horizons in Family Nursing , 2005, Journal of family nursing.

[6]  C. Chesla Nursing Science and Chronic Illness: Articulating Suffering and Possibility in Family Life , 2005, Journal of family nursing.

[7]  B. Leake,et al.  Mental health outcomes in older women with breast cancer: Impact of perceived family support and adjustment , 2005, Psycho-oncology.

[8]  Deborah Finfgeld-Connett,et al.  Clarification of social support. , 2005, Journal of nursing scholarship : an official publication of Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing.

[9]  Päivi Åstedt-Kurki,et al.  Development of a Family Assessment Instrument for Transcultural Use , 2003, Journal of transcultural nursing : official journal of the Transcultural Nursing Society.

[10]  Cheng Yijuan,et al.  Family support and self-care behavior of Chinese chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients. , 2002, Nursing & health sciences.

[11]  B. Given,et al.  Family Support in Advanced Cancer , 2001, CA: a cancer journal for clinicians.

[12]  G. Fine,et al.  Ethnography as Work: Career Socialization, Settings and Problems , 2001 .

[13]  Anitta Juntunen,et al.  Professional and lay care in the Tanzanian village of Ilembula , 2001 .

[14]  Suomenkielinen tiivistelmä PROFESSIONAL AND LAY CARE IN THE TANZANIAN VILLAGE OF ILEMBULA , 2001 .

[15]  T. Ghebrehiwet Ethnography in Nursing Research , 2000 .

[16]  C. Waters Professional nursing support for culturally diverse family members of critically ill adults. , 1999, Research in nursing & health.

[17]  J. P. Maloney,et al.  Social support: a conceptual analysis. , 1997, Journal of advanced nursing.

[18]  Rosalie A. Kane,et al.  Family caregiving in an aging society : policy perspectives , 1995 .

[19]  Agnes M. Aamodt,et al.  Ethnography and Epistemology: Generating Nursing Knowledge , 1991 .

[20]  P. Fielding Into the community. , 1991, Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987).

[21]  E. Guba,et al.  Naturalistic inquiry: Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications, 1985, 416 pp., $25.00 (Cloth) , 1985 .

[22]  Numerous Contributors The Discussion of Ethics , 1883, Buffalo medical and surgical journal.