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Journal Article

Citation

Anderson DG, Imle MA. West. J. Nurs. Res. 2001; 23(4): 394-413.

Affiliation

University of Kentucky, College of Nursing, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11383402

Abstract

Naturalistic inquiry was used to compare the characteristics of families of origin of homeless women with never-homeless women. The women's experiences in their families of origin were explored during in-depth interviews using Lofland and Lofland's conceptions of meanings, practices, episodes, roles, and relationships to guide the analysis. The two groups were similar with respect to family abuse history, transience, and loss. The never-homeless women had support from an extended family member who provided unconditional love, protection, a sense of connection, and age-appropriate expectations, as contrasted with homeless women who described themselves as being without, disconnected, and having to be little adults in their families of origin. The experience of family love and connection seemed to protect never-homeless women from the effects of traumatic life events in childhood. These findings provide support for the influence of a woman's family of origin as a precursor to homelessness.


Language: en

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