“THE ‘DIET’ IS A TIME TO CARE”: SELF-CARE PRACTICES DURING THE PUERPERIUM IN THE RURAL ENVIRONMENT
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5902/2179769229045Keywords:
Nursing, Postpartum period, Rural population, CultureAbstract
Aims: to discover the meanings of the self-care practices of women living in rural areas regarding the puerperium; to identify the interfaces of these practices with the different models of health care. Method: ethnography conducted in three small city rural communities in the North of Rio Grande do Sul/Brazil. Seventeen participants were involved. Observation-Participation-Reflection techniques and ethnographic interviews were employed in the data collection. In the analytical process, a thematic analysis proposal was used. Results: it was verified that the puerperium is marked by self-care practices related to food, physical activity, hygiene, and sociability arising from the family/community, with little connection with the professional healthcare sector. Conclusion: these practices are intended to protect the women who just gave birth, who, in their social group’s interpretation, are in a liminal state between health and sickness. Simultaneously, they also grant considerable power to the postnatal women and their families.Downloads
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