Filial piety obligations and the lived experience of Korean female caregivers of aging parents-in-law in Canada

This study examined, through a narrative phenomenological framework, the experiences of Korean female caregivers in Canada, and the ways in which filial piety obligations affected their quality of life. The existing literature is scarce on information about caregiving by Korean females in both North...

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Main Author: Do, Eun Kyeong
Other Authors: Fuchs, Don (Social Work)
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/32052
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-320522017-03-14T15:56:41Z Filial piety obligations and the lived experience of Korean female caregivers of aging parents-in-law in Canada Do, Eun Kyeong Fuchs, Don (Social Work) Taylor, Laura (Social Work) Menec, Verena (Community Health Sciences) Filial Piety Caregiving Korean immigrants Confucian principles Cultural obligations Feminist approach Narrative phenomenology framework Daughter-in-law's coping strategies Aging parents-in-law Observing care from childhood Direct caregiving practices Canadian contexts regarding Korean caregiviers This study examined, through a narrative phenomenological framework, the experiences of Korean female caregivers in Canada, and the ways in which filial piety obligations affected their quality of life. The existing literature is scarce on information about caregiving by Korean females in both North America and Canada. Further, caregiving issues regarding caregiving stress have mostly investigated the medical aspects. It was crucial, therefore, to investigate and understand the social aspects of the caregiving experience. Korean daughters-in-law (DILs), who lived with their aging parents-in-law (PILs) in environments profoundly rooted in Confucian values, experienced conflicts with their parents/mothers-in-law. A number of caregiving hardships were identified and categorized according to the following two themes: cultural obligations and direct caregiving practices. Some DILs’ caregiving hardships were heavier when they moved to Canada and adopted a new culture. The findings of this study show that the caregiving practices of these Korean female caregivers in Canada are changing as the DILs have been influenced by their new environment, but the findings also demonstrate that the DILs are still strongly affected by the traditional cultural values in which they were raised. This study investigated their attitudes and behaviours of these women in their caregiving roles by employing a qualitative research design. As little research has been done on immigrant women’s caregiving experience, this study provides an important contribution by examining the lived experience of immigrant women as it is affected by the traditional cultural value of filial piety. February 2017 2017-01-18T19:41:18Z 2017-01-18T19:41:18Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/32052
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Filial Piety
Caregiving
Korean immigrants
Confucian principles
Cultural obligations
Feminist approach
Narrative phenomenology framework
Daughter-in-law's coping strategies
Aging parents-in-law
Observing care from childhood
Direct caregiving practices
Canadian contexts regarding Korean caregiviers
spellingShingle Filial Piety
Caregiving
Korean immigrants
Confucian principles
Cultural obligations
Feminist approach
Narrative phenomenology framework
Daughter-in-law's coping strategies
Aging parents-in-law
Observing care from childhood
Direct caregiving practices
Canadian contexts regarding Korean caregiviers
Do, Eun Kyeong
Filial piety obligations and the lived experience of Korean female caregivers of aging parents-in-law in Canada
description This study examined, through a narrative phenomenological framework, the experiences of Korean female caregivers in Canada, and the ways in which filial piety obligations affected their quality of life. The existing literature is scarce on information about caregiving by Korean females in both North America and Canada. Further, caregiving issues regarding caregiving stress have mostly investigated the medical aspects. It was crucial, therefore, to investigate and understand the social aspects of the caregiving experience. Korean daughters-in-law (DILs), who lived with their aging parents-in-law (PILs) in environments profoundly rooted in Confucian values, experienced conflicts with their parents/mothers-in-law. A number of caregiving hardships were identified and categorized according to the following two themes: cultural obligations and direct caregiving practices. Some DILs’ caregiving hardships were heavier when they moved to Canada and adopted a new culture. The findings of this study show that the caregiving practices of these Korean female caregivers in Canada are changing as the DILs have been influenced by their new environment, but the findings also demonstrate that the DILs are still strongly affected by the traditional cultural values in which they were raised. This study investigated their attitudes and behaviours of these women in their caregiving roles by employing a qualitative research design. As little research has been done on immigrant women’s caregiving experience, this study provides an important contribution by examining the lived experience of immigrant women as it is affected by the traditional cultural value of filial piety. === February 2017
author2 Fuchs, Don (Social Work)
author_facet Fuchs, Don (Social Work)
Do, Eun Kyeong
author Do, Eun Kyeong
author_sort Do, Eun Kyeong
title Filial piety obligations and the lived experience of Korean female caregivers of aging parents-in-law in Canada
title_short Filial piety obligations and the lived experience of Korean female caregivers of aging parents-in-law in Canada
title_full Filial piety obligations and the lived experience of Korean female caregivers of aging parents-in-law in Canada
title_fullStr Filial piety obligations and the lived experience of Korean female caregivers of aging parents-in-law in Canada
title_full_unstemmed Filial piety obligations and the lived experience of Korean female caregivers of aging parents-in-law in Canada
title_sort filial piety obligations and the lived experience of korean female caregivers of aging parents-in-law in canada
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/32052
work_keys_str_mv AT doeunkyeong filialpietyobligationsandthelivedexperienceofkoreanfemalecaregiversofagingparentsinlawincanada
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