Time at Home during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings from Focus Groups with Hispanic Parents
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
“I used to be in a rush, would leave to go to work, I would just say I love you in a rush, good morning in a rush. However, not now, with all the patience, “good morning, I love you”, and I give a lot of hugs, I tell him how much I love him, I show him all the love I have for him, and before I was in a rush, and not anymore. That changed a lot.”(FG7.4)
“They responded, at first negatively, at first, they would get upset and say, “ayy not this pandemic” and complain, they had been telling me that they want to go to school, that they did not like to be here, but now they say it is for our own good to be [home]…it’s for our own good to be like this online.”(FG5.3)
“Well, my children have done well. At the beginning, my girl entered first grade and she did not know much about technology. So, if we have work, and it is difficult for me because I do not know how to send the homework, then I have to wait so that my child has time to be able to send homework and open the applications she needs to do. So, mine has gone well, the problem has been how to deliver the homework of the youngest girl, it has been complicated for me until now.”(FG8.2)
“It [physical activity] would be very little. Just on the days of the week that they do virtual PE, and on the weekends when they can get together with their cousins. From time to time they have video games that include physical activity, but usually nothing compared to what they did before in school, or when we could go out a little bit more frequently to the park. So, it has decreased a lot.”(FG8.3)
“Additionally, sincerely since this started, not only the children but we also got super nervous. During that time the news would show the empty shelves, they looked at each other when they emptied the shops and my daughters would say to me, “Mommy, and what are we going to do without food, mommy what are we going to do without this?”. It was a concern for them and for us, and more them because they understand to a certain extent, they get to a point that they understand, their mind shoots further than their knowledge and you do not know to what extent it can affect them or to what extent they cannot. Additionally, they get carried away by everything that is in the news, or what they said practically in the news and they imagined themselves as their worst, and one did not, one said, “okay, because if we cannot get things in this store, we can get it in this one”. Or we find it easier to look for the things that were said in the news that were gone, and for them they get affected to a certain point, so after that we would not let them watch the news.”(FG4.2)
“I keep thinking, what worries us the most is that this is going to go on for many years, so that my girls are going to have to get used to it, they are going to have to grow up in a world like this, with fear, always fear in the back of our minds where they will not be able to join peer parties, meet their peers, their teachers, who will always have to be on the computer and more that the virus would come back. Thank God no one has passed away, no one immediately from our family, but if something were to happen due to this pandemic, I think it would be very difficult to talk to my girl, or that we get sick again, I think it’s the fear more of this, it’s going to last and lose years from her childhood.”(FG4.1)
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Median Parent Age (IQR) | 38.00 (31.00–43.00) |
Median Child Age (IQR) | 12.00 (7.00–16.00) |
Median Number of Children per Family (IQR) | 3.00 (2.00–4.00) |
Married or Cohabitating, n (%) | 23 (79) |
Parent Gender, n (%) | |
Mother participants | 28 (97) |
Father participants | 1 (3) |
Resided in Central Valley, California, n (%) | 28 (97) |
Parent Language Spoken, n (%) | |
Speaks only Spanish | 10 (35) |
Spanish better than English | 8 (28) |
Spanish and English equally well | 8 (28) |
English better than Spanish | 3 (10) |
Parent Education, n (%) | |
Less than high school | 14 (48) |
High school | 6 (21) |
Technical school | 4 (14) |
Bachelor’s degree | 2 (7) |
Master’s degree | 2 (7) |
Declined to respond | 1 (3) |
Parent Health Status, n (%) | |
Excellent | 3 (10) |
Very good | 2 (7) |
Good | 21 (72) |
Fair | 3 (10) |
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Hammons, A.J.; Robart, R.; Gonzalez, G. Time at Home during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings from Focus Groups with Hispanic Parents. Children 2022, 9, 634. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9050634
Hammons AJ, Robart R, Gonzalez G. Time at Home during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings from Focus Groups with Hispanic Parents. Children. 2022; 9(5):634. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9050634
Chicago/Turabian StyleHammons, Amber J., Ryan Robart, and Guadalupe Gonzalez. 2022. "Time at Home during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings from Focus Groups with Hispanic Parents" Children 9, no. 5: 634. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9050634
APA StyleHammons, A. J., Robart, R., & Gonzalez, G. (2022). Time at Home during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings from Focus Groups with Hispanic Parents. Children, 9(5), 634. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9050634