“Let’s talk about sex baby” - A comparative study of parents’ perceptions of parent-child sexuality communication with their adolescent children in rural and urban settings in eThekwini Municipality, KwaZulu-Natal.
Date
2017
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Abstract
In South Africa, the teenage pregnancy prevalence rate stands at 47 births
per 1000 girls per annum for girls aged between 15 and 19 years, as opposed
to 15 per 1000 girls in the United Kingdom (UK), and 24 per 1000 girls in the
United States (US). Unintended adolescent pregnancies pose threats not only
to the adolescent, but also to the adolescent’s family, community and country.
There is worldwide agreement that ending adolescent pregnancies should be
part of national strategies for poverty reduction and social justice, as they
undermine the achievement of several Goals for Sustainable Development
(SDGs).
Parent-child communication on sexuality has been shown to improve sexual
and reproductive outcomes in adolescents. However, little research is
available to indicate the effectiveness of this approach within the African
context, more specifically, the KwaZulu-Natal context in South Africa. This
study explores Zulu speaking parents’ perceptions of parent-child
communication on sexuality in a rural area, Umnini, and in an urban area,
Queensburgh in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Using a qualitative approach to research, involving focus group discussions
(FGDs) with rural and urban Zulu-speaking parents, selected using nonrandom
sampling, this study explores parents’ perceptions of parent-child
communication on sexuality. Framed through the theoretical lens of Mohan
Dutta’s Culture-Centred Approach (CCA) to health communication, and
Kincaid et al’s Social Ecology Model for Communication and Health Behaviour
(SEMCHB), findings reveal that the cultural context influences parental
communication on sexuality, and that parent-child communication on sexuality
needs to be embedded within a multi-level approach to health communication
at the individual, social, community and policy levels.
Description
Master of Social Science in Centre for Communication, Media and Society. University of KwaZulu-Natal. Durban, 2017.