Skip Navigation
Skip to contents

J Korean Acad Nurs : Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing

OPEN ACCESS

Articles

Page Path
HOME > J Korean Acad Nurs > Volume 25(4); 1995 > Article
Original Article
An Ethnographic Study of Sanhubyung experienced by Women in Korean Postpartal Culture
Eun Kwang Yoo
The Journal of Nurses Academic Society 1995;25(4):825-836.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4040/jnas.1995.25.4.825
Published online: March 30, 2017

Copyright © 1995 Korean Society of Nursing Science

  • 11 Views
  • 0 Download
prev
  • This ethnogrphic exploratory study sought to define the meaning of Sanhubyung, as consequence from the perspective of the women who experienced it. A convenience sample of 9 elderly women in San Francisco, and 20 postpartal women and their 20 non-professional helpers during postpartum in Seoul, Korea were observed and interviewed for 23 months from January 1991 to December 1992 at the Human Development Center in San Francisco and at the hospital and their homes in Seoul, Korea. Sanhubyung was regarded as the consequence of "Doing a Sanhujori Wrongly," as a group of symptoms or sequelae which have two types of characteristics of symptoms; chronic and acute. It can be called a culture bound syndrome in the cultural context related to childbearing phenomenon in Korea. If women violate the principles of Sanhujori, such symptoms can appear at various times: during the period of postpartum itself, at any time, periodically, especially at the anniversary of the child's birth, late forties, and in old age. Acute symptoms that can be classified into immediate and late types include painful and edematous gingiva, sensitive teeth, strange sensation and pain in the knees or backache. Besides, there is a localized sense of soreness and pain; sense of being in a draft and cold, stomach upset, GI irritation, chilling, shivering, and tiredness, pain and dazzling in the eyes. Chronic symptoms occur in the head, neck, teeth, back, hands, knees, hands and feet, arms and legs, eyes, sinews and joints, bones, and in the body or as a whole. Generally these symptoms are pain, often accompanying a feeling of being cold and in a draft, regardless of actual weather conditions. In conclusion, this findings reflect the Oriental way of thought of causal relationship of women's health and illness based on the wholistic paradigm of harmony and balance of two forces, Yin(cold) ?Yang(hot). It provides a challenge to the professional sector to rethink the effect of culture on health and illness. Finally, it suggests care providers use cultural assessment for the appropriateness of the intervention and quality of care for desirable health outcomes.

Figure & Data

REFERENCES

    Citations

    Citations to this article as recorded by  

      • Cite
        CITE
        export Copy Download
        Close
        Download Citation
        Download a citation file in RIS format that can be imported by all major citation management software, including EndNote, ProCite, RefWorks, and Reference Manager.

        Format:
        • RIS — For EndNote, ProCite, RefWorks, and most other reference management software
        • BibTeX — For JabRef, BibDesk, and other BibTeX-specific software
        Include:
        • Citation for the content below
        An Ethnographic Study of Sanhubyung experienced by Women in Korean Postpartal Culture
        Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing. 1995;25(4):825-836.   Published online March 30, 2017
        Close
      • XML DownloadXML Download
      We recommend
      An Ethnographic Study of Sanhubyung experienced by Women in Korean Postpartal Culture
      An Ethnographic Study of Sanhubyung experienced by Women in Korean Postpartal Culture

      J Korean Acad Nurs : Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing
      Close layer
      TOP