Spotlight on Migrant Mothers
Wednesday, 26 April 2006, 5:24 pm
Press Release: Auckland University of Technology 

Migrant new mothers in New Zealand are the focus of a study being
conducted by AUT University researcher Ruth DeSouza.  AUT's Centre for
Asian and Migrant Health Research Co-ordinator, Ruth DeSouza, has been
awarded a Families Commission Blue Skies grant to carry out this study,
as well as receiving funding from Plunket Volunteers. 

"The overall aim is to find out what helps and hinders these women,"
says Ruth. 

"Migrant mothers can be caught between their new culture which holds
their aspirations, while working hard to incorporate their traditional
culture and the values that have shaped who they are." Ms DeSouza is
working with the Royal New Zealand Plunket Society on this study and has
held focus groups with women from a range of ethnicities who have had
babies within the last year.  "New Zealand's immigrants are often
brought in to fill workforce shortages, so women are predominantly of
child-bearing age.  Adjusting to a new country is unpredictable - it can
be a slow process and raise issues when they have children.  "Families
often lose their support networks and rituals when they migrate and
their strengths and resilience in managing the transition to parenthood
can disappear," she says.  Ms DeSouza has a longstanding interest in
migrant mothers. She did her Masters of Arts thesis on mothers from New
Zealand's Goan (India) community and will focus on migrant mothers for
her PhD this year. 

AUT's Centre for Asian and Migrant Health Research has been involved in
migrant and Asian health research for more than 10 years, working to
improve these population groups' access to healthcare and wellbeing.

The centre widely disseminates its findings to inform policy
development, health care providers, health professionals, students,
policy makers and the wider community.  The Families Commission Blue
Skies Fund provides grants for small studies that address gaps in
knowledge, or offer new or innovative ideas and approaches to family
issues.

http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/ED0604/S00087.htm

~(^^)~

Avelino

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