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Journal of Nursing & Care | ISSN: 2167-1168 | Volume 7

3

rd

World Congress on

May 16-17, 2018 | Montreal, Canada

Nursing Education, Practice & Research

First voice experiences of homeless mothers: their journey through pregnancy and motherhood and for

some away from addictions

Jean Hughes

Dalhousie University, Canada

Y

outh between the ages of 16 and 24 are considered one of the fastest growing segments of the homeless population.

Research shows that the street youth population is diverse, complex and heterogeneous, and includes a number of

subcultures including hard-core street entrenched young people, group home kids, refugees and immigrants, and young single

mothers. Relative to the large body of work examining the risks associated with pathways into youth homelessness and the

risks associated with living on the streets, a limited amount of research has concentrated on pathways out of homelessness. The

exiting street life study was designed to address this gap by carrying out an in-depth, longitudinal, mixed-methods examination

of 51 young people as they tried to transition away from homelessness in Canada’s largest city (Toronto) and a medium sized

city (Halifax). One critical area of study was the trajectory out of homelessness by mothers: (4 Toronto and 9 Halifax). The

primary question focused on: What are the lived experiences of homeless young mothers as they negotiate the individual,

sociocultural, and economic tensions of transitioning out of homeless and street contexts and cultures? This presentation

focuses on the critical factors that assisted mothers in making positive gains. The paper also examines how the findings can

mobilize changes in education and policy – both in nursing and beyond?

Biography

Dr. Hughes is Senior Editor for the Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health. She is also Research Mentor for Peer 126, Horizon Health, St. John, NB and

holds an appointment with the IWK Health Centre (Research Scientist, Psychiatry). Her research and publications concentrate on marginalized populations with a

focus on mental health issues and are funded by a number of Federal and Provincial sources. Her research employs multiple methods (quantitative, qualitative),

large administrative datasets and is interdisciplinary, community-based, and participatory in nature. Her research also includes expertise from a range of disciplines

and sectors (community, government, NGO and university sectors), and integrates diverse research designs to enable a holistic exploration of phenomena.

jean.hughes@dal.ca

Jean Hughes, J Nurs Care 2018, Volume 7

DOI: 10.4172/2167-1168-C3-070