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Understanding the Tensions of “Good Motherhood” Through Women’s Digital Technology Use: Descriptive Qualitative Study

Understanding the Tensions of “Good Motherhood” Through Women’s Digital Technology Use: Descriptive Qualitative Study

Specifically, women are charged with the responsibility to take it upon themselves to enter the ranks of performing good motherhood [3,13]. As some research notes, North America’s cultural ideology of good motherhood asks women to give their all—physically, emotionally, psychologically, and intellectually—at all times, which consequently presents women with a model of nearly unachievable expectations [14].

Danica Facca, Jodi Hall, Bradley Hiebert, Lorie Donelle

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2023;6:e48934

Appraising Unmet Needs and Misinformation Spread About Polycystic Ovary Syndrome in 85,872 YouTube Comments Over 12 Years: Big Data Infodemiology Study

Appraising Unmet Needs and Misinformation Spread About Polycystic Ovary Syndrome in 85,872 YouTube Comments Over 12 Years: Big Data Infodemiology Study

The key themes associated with female users were symptoms of PCOS (such as irregular periods and acne), positive personal experiences (such as helpful and love), negative personal experiences (such as fatigue and pain), motherhood (such as infertility and trying to conceive), self-diagnosis, and use of professional terminology detailing their journey (Table 2).

Kashish Malhotra, Punith Kempegowda

J Med Internet Res 2023;25:e49220

Using Social Media for Qualitative Health Research in Danish Women of Reproductive Age: Online Focus Group Study on Facebook

Using Social Media for Qualitative Health Research in Danish Women of Reproductive Age: Online Focus Group Study on Facebook

Postponement of motherhood is not unique to Denmark but has been reported in other Western and Northern European countries too [20-24]. This paper presents an exploration of a qualitative methodological approach using Facebook to collect data from women of reproductive age, discussing their thoughts on the timing of motherhood.

Camilla Gry Temmesen, Henriette Svarre Nielsen, Heidi Lene Myglegård Andersen, Kathrine Birch Petersen, Jane Clemensen

JMIR Form Res 2021;5(5):e24108