2021
DOI: 10.1080/0092623x.2021.2012309
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Pursuing Pleasure Despite Pain: A Mixed-Methods Investigation of Black Women’s Responses to Sexual Pain and Coping

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Cited by 11 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…To ensure proper treatment occurs, both Black women and providers should be aware of the effects of double consciousness (i.e., feeling as though one’s Blackness is divided into two parts; the “two-ness” of being a Black person and a Black person in America; (Du Bois, 1903) on Black women’s healthcare experiences. The negative consequences of gendered-racism embedded in the healthcare system and internalized by some Black women have caused negative emotions like sexual shame and embarrassment, sexual pain stigma, healthcare stereotype threat, and sexual pain minimization (Abdou & Fingerhut, 2014; Malone et al, 2021; Rao, 2020; Witzeman et al, 2020). To navigate internal conflict related to sexual pain, Black women should receive increased access to resources informing them of how gendered-racism impacts their sexual and reproductive health.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To ensure proper treatment occurs, both Black women and providers should be aware of the effects of double consciousness (i.e., feeling as though one’s Blackness is divided into two parts; the “two-ness” of being a Black person and a Black person in America; (Du Bois, 1903) on Black women’s healthcare experiences. The negative consequences of gendered-racism embedded in the healthcare system and internalized by some Black women have caused negative emotions like sexual shame and embarrassment, sexual pain stigma, healthcare stereotype threat, and sexual pain minimization (Abdou & Fingerhut, 2014; Malone et al, 2021; Rao, 2020; Witzeman et al, 2020). To navigate internal conflict related to sexual pain, Black women should receive increased access to resources informing them of how gendered-racism impacts their sexual and reproductive health.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the Superwoman Schema “keeps [the Black woman] from identifying what she needs and reaching out for help” (Romero, 2000, p. 225), it is crucial to address how pressures to bear hardships without complaint may contribute to Black women’s hesitations to seek professional intervention in the case of sexual violence and abuse. Indeed, research has found that Black women were at increased risk for sexual violence (Hodges & Cabanilla, 2011), may ignore their sexual pain (Malone et al, 2021), and were less likely to seek social support from others compared to women from other racial groups, partially due to sociocultural pressure to present an image of strength (Catabay et al, 2019; Watson-Singleton, 2017). Black women may persevere through domestic hardship for the greater good of the Black community (i.e., avoid proliferating negative stereotypes about Black male sexual aggression, pressures to protect Black men from a racist legal system; Donovan & Williams, 2002).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Informational power is a metric for systematically determining an adequately powered sample size in qualitative and mixed-methods studies; it suits research using mixed-method methodologies and indicates that sample size should be determined based on the value of information participants contribute to the data set. Further, this approach to determining adequate sample size has successfully been used to study the sexual experiences of Black people through mixed-methods studies (e.g., Malone et al, 2022; Thorpe et al, 2022). The proposed guidelines for informational power include study aim, sample specificity, presence or absence of a guiding theory, quality or depth of qualitative response, and data analytic strategy (Malterud et al, 2016).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%