Deborah A. Potter
University of Louisville
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Featured researches published by Deborah A. Potter.
Qualitative Health Research | 2016
Deborah A. Potter; Lisa Markowitz; Siobhan E. Smith; Theresa Rajack-Talley; Margaret U. D’Silva; Lindsay J. Della; Latrica E. Best; Quaniqua Carthan
In this manuscript, we expand upon sociological research in lay knowledge about health and healthicization by examining socially mediated ways in which 40 African American adults in two communities acquired information about eating practices. Participants employed a variety of socially informed information-seeking strategies. Many, but not all, used socially prescribed sources exhorting them to maximize their own health and reported an amalgam of experiences concerning their interpretation of healthist messages. Participants variously accepted messages about healthy eating or engaged in strategies of micro-resistance that decentered and/or reinterpreted health promotion discourse. Furthermore, participants used emic community-based resources including those that prioritized familial engagement over individual responsibility in eating practices or that drew upon alternative health practices. We discuss the implications our work has for further research on healthicization and lay knowledge about eating practices, in which community members are actively engaged in meaning-making within local socio-structural contexts.
Journal of Child Sexual Abuse | 2013
Deborah Winders Davis; Gloria Pressley-McGruder; V. Faye Jones; Deborah A. Potter; Michael L. Rowland; Melissa L. Currie; Bruce Gale
Child sexual abuse poses a serious threat to public health and is often unreported, unrecognized, and untreated. Prevention, early recognition, and treatment are critically important to reduce long-term effects. Little data are available on effective methods of preventing child sexual abuse. The current research demonstrates a unique approach to promoting awareness and stimulating discussion about child sexual abuse. Qualitative methods have rarely been used to study child sexual abuse prevention. Qualitative inductive analyses of interviews from 20 key informants identified both positive and negative assessments with six emergent themes. The themes revealed inherent tensions in using narrative accounts to represent the complex cultural context within which child sexual abuse occurs. More research is needed, but the program shows potential as a methodology to raise awareness of child sexual abuse.
Qualitative Health Research | 2016
Deborah A. Potter
Publicly funded programs in many industrialized countries increasingly require the participation of citizens. In this article, I explore the “situated motives” of family members who participated alongside professionals in implementing children’s mental health programs in two communities in the United States. I conducted in-depth interviews with family members and observed monthly meetings of Community Collaboratives to assess how family members understood their participation. The inductive data analysis demonstrates that family members participated (a) as a therapeutic outlet, (b) to pay it forward, (c) to gain new skills, (d) to have a voice, and/or (e) to empower the community. I then use Giddens’ concepts of “life politics” and “emancipatory politics” to explore how these accounts variously reflected lay members’ orientations as consumers, empowered individuals, and/or citizen advocates. In the absence of articulated and specific objectives for family participation, these “situated motives” were salient and had implications for how policy was implemented.
Journal of Intercultural Communication Research | 2013
Siobhan E. Smith; Lindsay J. Della; Theresa Rajack-Talley; Margaret U. D'Silva; Deborah A. Potter; Lisa Markowitz; Latonia Craig; Keneka L. Cheatham; Quaniqua Carthan
This qualitative study employs the uses and gratifications framework to explore the perspective of African American women in Kentucky, specifically urban Louisville and rural Hopkinsville, to understand their use of media as potential sources for gathering information about healthy food habits. Key findings include how the participants used media for instrumental purposes to educate themselves about healthy food habits, and that the specific media personalities were very important to the participants as they decided to make healthier food selections.
International Journal of Social Research Methodology | 2017
Theresa Rajack-Talley; Siobhan E. Smith; Latrica E. Best; Lindsay J. Della; Margaret U. D’Silva; Deborah A. Potter; Quaniqua Carthan
Abstract African American communities have experienced negative effects from a history of medical abuse, lack of proper research procedures, and misinterpretations of study findings because of racism. These past injustices have led to a mistrust of research and researchers. This paper focuses on how some methodological challenges, in a study funded by a National Institutes of Health grant on two low-income African American communities in Kentucky, were mediated through the collaboration of a multi-racial/ethnic team of researchers engaged in cross-disciplinary research. The information for this paper is based on the reflections of key members of the research team. The reflections show that having researchers with different epistemologies resulted in a culturally aware and sensitive study in which emic and etic research approaches were adopted. The inclusion of race-based epistemologies and close community ties were found to be particularly useful in building trust and getting the support of the two communities. However, these outcomes were only possible because research team members provided each other latitude for intellectual freedom and leadership.
Deviant Behavior | 2014
Deborah A. Potter
This article compares diverse symbolic frames for the childhood psychiatric diagnosis “Conduct Disorder” (CD) found in the popular media with the dominant medicalized frame in the professional literature. Although vestiges of earlier frameworks remain, almost all professional accounts frame the disorder as a way of “acting out” the sick role. In contrast, the popular media use various culturally consistent frames, including delinquently “acting up.” However, unlike other instances in which the public and professionals lack a common understanding about a health condition, there has been no overt contestation about the definition of CD. Social, policy, and theoretical implications are explored.
Social Science & Medicine | 1996
John B. McKinlay; Deborah A. Potter; Henry A. Feldman
Social Science & Medicine | 1991
Jack A. Clark; Deborah A. Potter; John B. McKinlay
Health Services Research | 1997
Henry A. Feldman; John B. McKinlay; Deborah A. Potter; Karen M. Freund; Risa B. Burns; Michael A. Moskowitz; Linda Kasten
Medical Care | 1998
John B. McKinlay; Risa B. Burns; Henry A. Feldman; Karen M. Freund; Julie T. Irish; Linda Kasten; Mark A. Moskowitz; Deborah A. Potter; Kate Woodman