From Fathers to Fathers—Telephone-Based Peer Support: A Feasibility Study
Abstract
:1. Background
2. Peer Support to Improve Wellbeing
3. Implementation Fidelity
4. Methods
4.1. Study Design
4.1.1. The Telephone-Based Peer Support Program for Fathers
4.1.2. Frequency and Duration
4.2. Participant Recruitment
4.3. Data Collection
4.4. Data Analysis
4.5. Ethics
5. Findings
5.1. Fathers
- (1)
- Length of the conversation
We booked appointments by text and then we were called. He introduced himself, and it was obvious who we were when we SMS [texted] about follow-up times. It worked for me—Father 2.
- (2)
- Interval and beginning the calls
I don’t feel the need to talk more, but it would just be fun. But maybe after a longer period, it would be nice. It would have been good to follow-up—Father 1.
- (3)
- Timing of the phone calls
- (4)
- The telephone support format
Good thing about not seeing each other—it became a smaller threshold, because it can be judgmental on appearance—Father 6.
In some situations, it would have been nice to sometimes have a hug or pat on the back—Father 1.
- (1)
- Fatherly Advice
This bit is kind of an advice, but not directly—I appreciated it, the stories—Fathers 4
Here he’s also been very supportive and affirmative in that ‘You’re a good dad, you’re a good man, and you’re good at this.—Father 3
- (2)
- Life situation—a new life phase
I’m becoming more confident in my own [parental] role. I don’t care about the baby screaming. I’m calm and that’s perfectly fine.—Father 4
- (3)
- A need for social support
What was nice about having a peer father was that I’m the first in my group of friends to become a parent and automatically didn’t have a natural contact to turn to.—Father 2
It felt good that it was called support and not help. It felt more like, here is a person who went through something similar—Father 1.
The confirmation in the talk that you are a good father […], I feel much stronger and strengthened as a father now than I did before my conversations with my peer—Father 3.
5.2. The Peers
- (1)
- Reasons for being a peer
I felt in the last year that I am a role model for many men and then this is a mission I would like to be part of and share—Peer 4.
I felt that there were many questions, a lot of feelings within me, that I didn’t dare talk to anyone about, and I was unsure. And it would have been nice to have someone who… could unload and talk to someone and gain perspective—Peer 5.
- (2)
- Anonymous phone support and conversation
It [the program being anonymous] was an incredible benefit for the person I was the contact for because they didn’t know me. […] I don’t know anything about the person, have no relatives, no friends with that person, which means that that person can talk about things you might not talk to anyone else about—Peer 7.
We had a mirror-image relationship; he and his partner and me and my partner. There I could explain things from her perspective because I resembled her in relation to my partner.—Peer 2
… and then I came with some challenges to him: “Can you think like this? Can you think like that?”, and so on. He was very happy about it.—Peer 6
- (1)
- Dare to talk about your feelings
There aren’t that many natural forums where men can receive support in a positive way… It’s mostly beer and football that are in focus… These positive forums are not completely obvious, while I see this [peer support] as such.—Peer 1
- (2)
- The fathers’ need for individual support
We (men) are so used to always thinking that we should take care of everything, but then when the child is born, some situations arise when we think that it is the woman who should decide here, as if we are satisfied that now she will finally have the rights to decide. But that means we don’t, at all, reflect on “what do I really want myself”.—Peer 6
I felt that it was good to get in touch beforehand. Then you could talk about preparatory matters.—Peer 3
6. Discussion
6.1. Adherence to the Program
6.2. Participant Responsiveness
6.3. Program Differentiation
6.4. Frequency and Duration
6.5. Peers and Mentors
6.6. Potential Limitations to the TPSP-F Program
6.7. Strengths and Limitations
7. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Main Themes | Categories |
---|---|
Conditions that affect the experience of telephone support | Length of the conversation |
Interval and beginning the calls | |
Timing of the phone calls | |
The telephone support format | |
The importance of support | Fatherly Advice |
Life situation—a new phase in life | |
A need for social support |
Main Themes | Categories |
---|---|
Peer’s own role and experience | Reasons for being a peer |
Anonymous phone support and conversation | |
Importance of listening to fathers | Dare to talk about your feelings |
The fathers’ need for social support |
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Andersson, E.; Espinosa, L.; Wells, M.B. From Fathers to Fathers—Telephone-Based Peer Support: A Feasibility Study. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 155. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13030155
Andersson E, Espinosa L, Wells MB. From Fathers to Fathers—Telephone-Based Peer Support: A Feasibility Study. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(3):155. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13030155
Chicago/Turabian StyleAndersson, Ewa, Lisa Espinosa, and Michael B. Wells. 2024. "From Fathers to Fathers—Telephone-Based Peer Support: A Feasibility Study" Social Sciences 13, no. 3: 155. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13030155
APA StyleAndersson, E., Espinosa, L., & Wells, M. B. (2024). From Fathers to Fathers—Telephone-Based Peer Support: A Feasibility Study. Social Sciences, 13(3), 155. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13030155