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Accumulating Stress Over the Life Course: Exploring Narratives of, Upward Mobility, Infant Mortality and Resiliency of African American Women with Higher SES

Payton, Trinadi
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Abstract

Using semi-structured qualitative interviews, this study will examine the ways in which early childhood and adolescent experiences may provide insight into high effort coping styles, in the process of either grieving the loss of an infant or pregnancy due to miscarriage or stillbirth. The Sojourner Syndrome theory will be used to provide a lens towards understanding the dynamic ways that African American women, particularly those who have experienced child loss, confront adversities, helping to shed light on how they encounter and cope with related stress. This theory will allow for an expansion on the understandings of high effort methods of coping with stress among African American women with a special focus on resilience and resistance. A total of 4 African American women between 25-45 years of age who have experienced the loss of pregnancy due to miscarriage or stillbirth and who reside in the greater Atlanta area will be interviewed.

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Date
2018-05-02
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Research Projects
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Keywords
Infant mortality, Race based stress, African American infant mortality, Sojourner Syndrome
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