Aim: To gather Aboriginal women's stories of smoking and becoming pregnant to identify the barriers in accepting smoking cessation support during pregnancy. Methods: Qualitative data were collected through use of yarning methodology between August 2015 and January 2016 by an Aboriginal Researcher with experience in social and community services. A short on-line survey was used to collect quantitative data. Interviews only recorded the therapeutic yarning process, which ranged from 9 to 45 min duration, averaging 30 min. Audio-recorded interviews were transcribed and independently coded. A general inductive analysis was used to determine emergent themes. Results: Twenty Aboriginal women between 17-38 years of age, who were pregnant or ...
Background Smoking prevalence in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander pregnant women is quadruple ...
Objective: One in two Indigenous Australian pregnant women smoke, yet little is known about their tr...
Smoking rates are slow to decline among pregnant Indigenous women. One in two pregnant Indigenous Au...
Background: Addressing smoking cessation during pregnancy among Aboriginal women is a national prior...
Objectives: To engage with health providers and Aboriginal women to understand what educational reso...
To assess support for 12 potential smoking cessation strategies among pregnant Australian Indigenous...
Introduction: Guidelines recommend assessment of smoking status, with advice and support for smoking...
Pregnancy can be a time of joy and a time of significant stress. For many Aboriginal and Torres Stra...
Smoke-free pregnancies have long-term health benefits for mothers and babies. This paper quantitativ...
Objective: To synthesise primary research regarding the facilitators and barriers to smoking cessati...
The Author(s) 2013. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract To asses...
Background: Urgent calls have been made to reduce the rates of smoking during pregnancy among Abori...
Maternal smoking rates in Australian Aboriginal women are triple that of the general population, wit...
The high prevalence of smoking among pregnant Aboriginal women – including First Nations, Inuit and ...
Objectives: Explore Aboriginal women’s responses to an adapted Risk Behaviour Diagnosis (RBD) Scale ...
Background Smoking prevalence in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander pregnant women is quadruple ...
Objective: One in two Indigenous Australian pregnant women smoke, yet little is known about their tr...
Smoking rates are slow to decline among pregnant Indigenous women. One in two pregnant Indigenous Au...
Background: Addressing smoking cessation during pregnancy among Aboriginal women is a national prior...
Objectives: To engage with health providers and Aboriginal women to understand what educational reso...
To assess support for 12 potential smoking cessation strategies among pregnant Australian Indigenous...
Introduction: Guidelines recommend assessment of smoking status, with advice and support for smoking...
Pregnancy can be a time of joy and a time of significant stress. For many Aboriginal and Torres Stra...
Smoke-free pregnancies have long-term health benefits for mothers and babies. This paper quantitativ...
Objective: To synthesise primary research regarding the facilitators and barriers to smoking cessati...
The Author(s) 2013. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract To asses...
Background: Urgent calls have been made to reduce the rates of smoking during pregnancy among Abori...
Maternal smoking rates in Australian Aboriginal women are triple that of the general population, wit...
The high prevalence of smoking among pregnant Aboriginal women – including First Nations, Inuit and ...
Objectives: Explore Aboriginal women’s responses to an adapted Risk Behaviour Diagnosis (RBD) Scale ...
Background Smoking prevalence in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander pregnant women is quadruple ...
Objective: One in two Indigenous Australian pregnant women smoke, yet little is known about their tr...
Smoking rates are slow to decline among pregnant Indigenous women. One in two pregnant Indigenous Au...