Abstract

Traditional postpartum care practices in East Asia have been recognized as non-functional by some government public health agencies. This study examined the perception of traditional postpartum care practice among families of Korean descent in the United States. In addition to pragmatic health care issues, the research was designed to contribute to cross-cultural understanding of hot-cold theory of reproductive behavior. A descriptive survey study and follow-up interviews were conducted among women of Korean descent living in the United States (n = 141). A questionnaire was used to explore the variation in women's beliefs about traditional postpartum care and the extent to which they or their relatives practiced this care. In the follow-up interview, the participants freely described the different ways of postpartum care practice. Compared to women from other Asian and immigrant populations, women of Korean descent maintained similar or higher rates of believing the functionality of temperature maintenance care practice, and believed that the associated forms of traditional care will continue in the future. Traditional postpartum care practices are broadly shared and practiced in Asian immigrant populations, even in highly industrialized and modernized settings. Furthermore, from their own experience of somatic pain and its functionality, women called for better implementation of traditional care as an alternative or supplement to modern medical care. Health-care systems need to improve understanding and accommodation of cultural beliefs about possible benefits of temperature maintenance after childbirth in Asian ethnic populations.

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