Abstract

The purpose of this research was to describe: (a) Arab-American immigrant parents' perceptions of their social networks, including social support; and (b) Arab-American immigrant parents' perceptions of their help-seeking related to child health care. Seventy-three immigrant parents who were Egyptian-American (n = 17), Palestinian-American (n = 44) and Yemeni-American (n = 12) completed the Norbeck Social Support Questionnaire, four Supplementary Social Support Questions, a Support System Map and a Child Health Interview Guide. Family and relatives were perceived as the major source of support and comprised the highest percentage of social network members. Compared with published scores of a normative American sample, the immigrant parents' scores were lower (P less than 0.01) on all social network and social support variables. There was a moderate negative correlation (r = 0.47) between parents' number of years of residence in the USA and percentage of network members living outside the USA (P less than 0.01) and a weak positive correlation (r = 0.36) between number of years in the USA and percentage of network members living close to the parent (P less than 0.01). Parents' help-seeking for child health care involved use of a variety of resources, with reliance on some long-distance support from family in the Middle-East. This descriptive research provides a basis for further research on patterns of support and help-seeking in immigrant parents.

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