4.3 Article

Modes of entry into services for young children with disruptive behaviors

Journal

QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages 1211-1226

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1049732304268784

Keywords

service pathways; children; disruptive behaviors; Latino

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The authors undertook this study to describe Latina mothers' professional help seeking for their young children's disruptive behaviors. They interviewed 62 Cuban, Puerto Rican, and Dominican first-time help seekers and found four modes of entry: (a) coercion, (b) acceptance of offered referral, (c) responsive and resourceful help seeking subsequent to school reports of behavior problems, and (d) a laborious and convoluted path that was characteristic of 52% of the sample. Schools, maternal and child characteristics, and social network forces played significant roles for all mothers, but the final determinants of service entry varied by the mode of entry followed. Findings suggest that problem labeling is not a necessary precursor to service entry and that direct referrals might effectively shortcut the help-seeking process. Finally, the process that underlies service entry would be described more aptly as a Theory of Affective Action than a Theory of Reasoned Action.

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