latino adolescent
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2021 ◽  
pp. 074355842110184
Author(s):  
Roderick L. Carey

As researchers and school stakeholders determine ways to best support Black and Latino adolescent boys from low-income communities in actualizing their postsecondary future ambitions, more attention is needed on the types of futures these boys imagine and how family members influence this process. Guided by future orientations and possible selves frameworks, this school-based ethnographic study investigated the ways families influenced what the author calls the “postsecondary future selves” of Black and Latino (i.e., U.S.-born Salvadoran) 11th-grade boys ( N = 5). Described as what youth conceptualize as possible, likely, and expected for their lives after high school, postsecondary future selves considers three future domains: “college” (postsecondary education), “career” (postcollege employment trajectory), and “condition” (expected financial stability, relational and familial prospects, future living arrangements, happiness, and joy). Findings indicate that families built their boys’ capacities for envisioning and making strides toward ideal futures. Finding “success,” “being somebody,” and “having a future” underscored familial messages that emphasized the salience of college going in obtaining a career and life condition that would lead their boys to finding pride and fulfillment. Implications support stakeholders in building adolescents’ efficacy for threading linkages between college going and college majors, career trajectories, and expected life conditions, thus complementing familial-based supports.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Cristina Lindsay ◽  
Madelyne J. Valdez ◽  
Denisse Delgado Vazquez ◽  
Emily Restrepo ◽  
Yessica M. Guzman ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Parents play a critical decision-making role in vaccinating their age-eligible adolescent children against HPV. Despite evidence indicating that Latino adolescents have higher HPV vaccination rates than non-Hispanic whites, uptake of the HPV vaccine remains lower than the 80% goal set by the Healthy People 2020. Moreover, studies suggest that Latino adolescent males have lower rates of HPV vaccination than Latina adolescent females. OBJECTIVE Given the importance of the HPV vaccination as a cancer prevention strategy and the unique decision-making role parents play in vaccinating their children, this study was designed to explore Latina mothers’: (1) acceptance of the HPV vaccine, and (2) suggested strategies to promote vaccine uptake among Latino parents and their adolescent children. METHODS A descriptive qualitative research employing individual semi-structured interviews. Data were analyzed using a hybrid method of thematic analysis that incorporated deductive and inductive approaches. RESULTS Twenty-two, majority foreign-born (91%; n = 20) Latina mothers of adolescent girls (~ 60%; n = 23) and boys (~ 40%; n = 15) aged between 11 and 19 years (mean age of adolescents: 15.3 years) participated in the study. Results revealed mothers’ high acceptance of the HPV vaccine for their daughters and their positive beliefs about the direct benefits of the vaccine to protect their daughters’ health by preventing STI and future cervical cancer risk. Such positive beliefs influenced mothers’ high uptake and initiation of the vaccine for their daughters. In contrast, study findings revealed mothers’ low acceptance and uptake of the vaccine for their sons. Our findings showed that the majority of mothers did not perceiving HPV infection as a major risk to their sons’ health, and therefore, did not perceive direct health benefits of the HPV vaccine for their sons as they did for their daughters (i.e., prevention of cervical cancer). CONCLUSIONS Findings identified the need for increased efforts to raise awareness and knowledge among Latino parents of the direct benefits of the vaccine for their sons and the cancer prevention benefits of the vaccine for HPV-associated cancers that affect not only females but also males. Finally, findings underscore the need for improved healthcare providers' communication and recommendation of the HPV vaccine for Latino adolescent males. Future research should intervene upon findings identified in this study in order to address barriers that remain and affect Latino parents’ acceptance and uptake of the HPV vaccine for their children, and in particular, for their sons. CLINICALTRIAL n/a


Author(s):  
Jacqueline N. Casillas ◽  
Lindsay F. Schwartz ◽  
Jennifer L. Gildner ◽  
Catherine M. Crespi ◽  
Patricia A. Ganz ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Youjie Zhang ◽  
Aysegul Baltaci ◽  
Francine Overcash ◽  
Stephanie Druziako ◽  
Alejandro Peralta ◽  
...  

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