“Our Mothers Have Handed That to Us. Her Mother Has Handed That to Her”: Urban Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Yarning about Community Wellbeing, Healthy Pregnancies, and the Prevention of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Setting and Design
2.2. Indigenous Community Governance, Ethics, and Researcher Reflexivity
2.3. Participants and Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Community Life
“So I think for a lot of black people and a lot of people of other cultures, they feel safe because they are in a place where they can see themselves and they can see you know that—yeah, they can see themselves and see their culture represented throughout the community…”(p. 2)
“Like, I just came to here [to Inala] … I didn’t have [support]—yeah, somebody would tell you something… it’s just all that community yarning. Yeah, it’s so powerful… because that’s one thing I really get out of Inala… there is always someone there that can maybe give you some information that you can go and do… but Inala itself has that, because people do… they want to help you…”(p. 4)
“And everyone is like one big family and we all look after each other’s kids through good and bad times… and we know that we have that here.”(p. 1)
“And there would be those that just drink to get drunk; they’re either stressed out, or just need to let it go, leave the week behind or whatever… I think it’s just a temporary Band-Aid. It’s just that quick little buzz. And I think they’re trying to cope… They’re just getting that quick little—probably that time where they’re not thinking about that stress, and being weighed down with whatever’s going on in their lives.”(p. 8)
“Inala’s good. I like living here. I’m proud of Inala. It’s just that we’ve had our fair share of problems: drug use, unemployment, police harassment and discrimination. And a lot of that is still happening today. Nothing much really changed… I’ve experienced it [police harassment] personally over the years—and my family and other members in the community that we know…”(p. 3)
3.2. Parenting and Family Life
“… my mum would have maybe four of her siblings living with us and they all had babies and we were all older, so we had to help with those babies and that’s where we were taught all our little things [about child raising] that she was taught—so they all teach us, all our aunties as well. Not just our mother, they were all taught the same but yeah, our aunties as well would teach us.”(p. 7)
“… I was working as the administrator and a court support liaison person. And the people [parents of clients] that I went to school with, that I know, were, and still are, alcohol drinkers. And they drank through pregnancies, they drank through sadness, they drank through happiness, they did. [I knew these clients struggled with understanding bail conditions] It was sort of—it was in the body language, it was in the fact that there were things that I would say that I know myself, I would question… So I knew I had to try and explain a little bit more… Yeah, I don’t know why. I put it down to the fetal alcohol syndrome…”(p. 5)
“But I make sure that when we do have twenty-first [birthdays] and family functions… I always try to tell my nieces and nephews that are drinking, I’m still having fun, I’m the first one up on the dance floor, I’m the last one up on the dance floor. I can still have fun. And they’re always like, “Aunty, are you drinking?” I’m like, “No, I don’t have to. I’m good. I’m going to be fine tomorrow; you guys are going to be hungover,” and stuff like that.”(p. 8)
“Due to drugs and alcohol. Whereas the parents aren’t able to focus or function, so in order not to see our grannies [grandchildren], our kids, go into foster home or—we step in and we take them, look after them. None of us care much for Child Safety… Our main concern is our children. Get them out of harm’s way… That just goes way, way back… It’s just something we all do. It must happen in the white community as well sometimes, but not very often. Not as much as within our Murri [Murri is a demonym for Aboriginal Australians of modern-day Queensland and north-western New South Wales, www.wikiwand.com] community, I would say.”(p. 3)
3.3. Pregnancy Time
“We take our knowledge from our mothers, so, we’re going to believe our mothers before we believe you [non-Indigenous healthcare professionals]. For any of those nurses or anything—we feed our kids like this and we bath our kids like this and that’s from our mothers. Our mothers have handed that to us. Her mother has handed that to her. So, that’s the cycle again…we believe what our mother says, how to look after ourselves. We’ve always believed in what we were supposed to do when we were pregnant.”(p. 7)
“It comes from what’s been passed down to you as well, so there are people that may not get that message that drinking during pregnancy is not good for the baby. So they might not then be able to make a decision that’s best for the baby because they don’t have anybody guiding them with that and particularly if you don’t get that from your family, and if your partner doesn’t understand that as well, then you are not going to be able to get that support from the partner.”(p. 2)
“Cause when I was growing up, it was normal to see pregnant women drink and smoke. Because it wasn’t out there like the effects that alcohol, drugs, and smoking does to a child. It was like having—like, with seatbelts, you didn’t have seatbelts back in them days… they didn’t have that—the information out there and the research… it just wasn’t there.”(p. 7)
“And I never drank through my pregnancies because it’s not right and then to this day I don’t see a lot of people pregnant drinking [in my social circles] but I do see a lot of younger ones pregnant drinking on a regular basis, getting drunk, being pregnant. And they don’t like people telling them that they can’t drink. Or Facebook status is about them, people whinging to them about you shouldn’t drink while you’re pregnant. Why, what’s it going to do? They don’t know the effects of it.”(p. 1)
“So, [the father] would just be that support system. A quiet support system. Yeah. You know, my mother knows best. That’s the way we do it… and I just think that support [from the father]—and that’s even, like, washing, feeding, all that, like, washing the clothes, the babies, newborn clothes before they come home.”(p. 7)
“It’s so massive. Like, they have got a massive responsibility to support the women. And go and be there, through that whole journey with them. Because having two children to two different men, the difference in having the supportive man, that goes to your appointments, and goes with you, is massive. But then if you’ve got one that’s out partying, yeah, you’re on your own.”(p. 4)
3.4. The Role of Health Services in Supporting Healthy and Alcohol-Free Pregnancies
“Because the more knowledge, and more support that you have around you, that’s not going to harm, it’s going to empower people.”(p. 4)
“Yeah, that’s right because if we don’t like educate our Elders. They didn’t have that opportunity to be educated and they can set that through their families… So I think just promoting it at all age levels, especially our Elders.”(p. 7)
“And, depending on your relationship with your doctor and your health service as well, it’s how that message [about alcohol use risks during pregnancy] is then given to that woman to then be able to make a decision around their behaviors and how they actually care for that pregnancy.”(p. 2)
“It’s the worst thing to do to a black person or anyone, I think, is preach. Making people aware is a bit different. Maybe posters advertising it but coming from an Aboriginal view it might be a bit different than coming from a white man view… from the beginning it’s how do you ask someone these questions without offending someone so that would be interesting with this project.”(p. 1)
“So I think some of our young mums would see some of these ones on social media influencers and that, and probably, maybe, inspiring or striving to be similar…”(p. 8)
4. Discussion
4.1. Centring Indigenous Knowledge, Culture, and Contexts in FASD Prevention
4.2. Progressing Indigenous Approaches to FASD Prevention
4.3. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lyall, V.; Egert, S.; Reid, N.; Moritz, K.; Askew, D. “Our Mothers Have Handed That to Us. Her Mother Has Handed That to Her”: Urban Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Yarning about Community Wellbeing, Healthy Pregnancies, and the Prevention of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 5614. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20095614
Lyall V, Egert S, Reid N, Moritz K, Askew D. “Our Mothers Have Handed That to Us. Her Mother Has Handed That to Her”: Urban Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Yarning about Community Wellbeing, Healthy Pregnancies, and the Prevention of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(9):5614. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20095614
Chicago/Turabian StyleLyall, Vivian, Sonya Egert, Natasha Reid, Karen Moritz, and Deborah Askew. 2023. "“Our Mothers Have Handed That to Us. Her Mother Has Handed That to Her”: Urban Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Yarning about Community Wellbeing, Healthy Pregnancies, and the Prevention of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 9: 5614. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20095614