Study | Country | Number of indigenous women participants (n) | Age range (years) | Methodological framework | Data collection | Analysis e.g. content, framework, thematic, GT | Topic |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bovill [29] | Australia | 20 | 17–38 | Therapeutic yarning | Face to face interviews | Inductive thematic analysis | Barriers to accepting smoking cessation support |
Glover [30]a | New Zealand | 60 | 17–43 | “Te Whare Tapa Wha” – Indigenous theoretical framework | Semi-structured face to face interviews | Thematic analysis | Why Maori women continue to smoke during pregnancy |
Glover [28]a | New Zealand | 60 | 17–43 | Not stated | Semi-structured face to face interviews | Thematic analysis | Perceptions of smoking cessations support |
Glover [39] | New Zealand | 92 (Maori) not specific | NS | Exploratory | Focus groups | General inductive approach | Motivation to quit |
Gould, 2013 [26] | Australia | 18 (15 women 3 men) | 17–53 | Not specified | Focus groups | Constant comparative method | Smoking in pregnancy and house |
Gould, 2017 [27] | Australia | 20 | 17–38 | Yarning or conversational talking | Face to face interviews | Inductive | Narratives from smoking initiation through to pregnancy |
Wood, 2008 [31] | Australia | 40 | 14–50 | Not specified | Focus groups and interviews | Thematic | Knowledge, cultural contexts and barriers to smoking cessation in pregnancy |