A Conceptual Model for Strengthening Family Capabilities Through a Process of Care
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. The Family, in the South African Context
“Biological family is sometimes associated with words that instigate fear, danger, and insecurity, while the concept of chosen family is associated with words like trusting, like-minded, understanding, welcoming, loving, committed, etc.”(p. 1)
1.2. Developing an Understanding of Family Capabilities
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design and Setting
2.2. Location and Sampling
2.3. Data Collection Strategy and Analysis
2.4. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Tangible Needs
“You must be grateful for a spare job, maybe one of two days in the week that only pays R200, but even if you can buy bread with it, it’s fine, it’s food on the table.”(Natalie, female, 38 years old)
“We play a lot together, he likes to run.”(Sammy, female, 55 years old)
“I like the bond, I like the fact that we can share something in common and that we can speak about it and have a human connection. I speak with him any type of conversation, just speak about anything.”(Chantelle, female, 27 years old)
“So, you get your message every morning and if anything happens within the other family units you get to know about it.”(Amy, female, 50 years old)
“In that drug house, she began giving birth. They called my other daughter to come and look because the baby is on her way… She phoned me to say that I [mommy] must now come. [I] mommy must come now! The child must go to the hospital…. This man rushed me to the hospital. When I got there, the baby was under pipes… The child survived.”(Fiona, female, 58 years old)
“I wash him and give him his medicine. They didn’t want me to go with them to the hospital. They go with him but then they just drop the stuff by me. Like with the medication, I don’t actually know how to do it, but I give it. I read how to do it, then I give it to him. He can’t do anything for himself… He depends on me. I must I must provide for everything.”(Lisa, female, 50 years old)
3.2. Intangible Needs
“Love is the most important thing.”(Natalie, female, 38 years old)
“She loves me. Because she tells me.”(Jack, adolescent boy)
“I’m very proud of him, he’s working now. He has a girlfriend and sometimes he doesn’t need his mommy anymore. His mommy is very proud of him.”(Saskia, female, 50 years old)
“You must respect your mother and father so that you can respect.”(Sara, female, 40 years old)
“The respect, the discipline. It’s not about material things, material stuff. It’s always about respect and discipline and love. The love they give to you, they share that love. You don’t give that, you leave it there.”(Frank, male, 53 years old)
3.3. Harms
“… a home is not always a safe space for everybody to be around because if you’ve been raised by abusive or been abused then that home is not going to be a safe space.”(Sasha, female, 55 years old)
“Since my mother passed away, I never really had someone to speak to… Because sometimes families, they don’t have time to listen to what you, you know, to you. Or they have their own problems and whatever they have. So, they don’t want to listen to you…Even though I’m not working… I do whatever I… I give you whatever… But it’s never enough. Whatever I do is never enough.”(Fadwa, female, 40 years old)
“I also lost my daughter seven years ago to sudden infant death syndrome…. I don’t have a mommy or daddy anymore, and since they died the rest of my family wrote me off.”(Alana, female, 50 years old)
“Life experiences can be very taxing, very difficult. It pushes you to a place where you do not really want to share because you feel people are going to judge you.”(Eve, female, 52 years old)
“Only God [helps me]. That’s the only person… To God I can talk to. And that is confidential. I can talk to God. He made me strong and He made me what I am [he’s the only one I trust]… I can’t go to my sisters or my brother.”(Eve, female, 52 years old)
3.4. Caring About
“There’s food…suitable clothes for them.”(Natalie, female, 38 years old)
“The father left and we don’t worry anymore, so I did promise them a better life than I have. I did not do matric, and I just want to work… At this moment, that is all that matters to me now, to give them a better life than I have… I’m looking now for work to give them a better life and for us to live together in our own house, alone without the father.”(Lucy, female, 20 years old)
“My real mother kept me in school but my father took me out. So, I don’t feel like going anymore. My stepmother hasn’t worked for three or four years now… She just scolds”(Bobby, adolescent boy)
“… I was with my mom and dad. When I was one, my father went to Potchefstroom and my mom stayed here. I haven’t seen him for seven years… He doesn’t make time for me anymore, he doesn’t come to me. When I was four years old, I got a stepdad, a policeman. That guy was a mad head. Some evenings he would then chase me, he wants to shoot me in the house.”(Ashley, adolescent girl)
3.5. Caring for
“Sometimes they communicate with their father, but they don’t have a bond so they just have a relationship with me.”(Lucy, female, 20 years old)
“Me as a mother, [I] need to fulfill the responsibility as a mother… I’m bringing the protection of the Lord always, I keep it always. I am the protection of the Lord for my family… I must be on my knees for my family… I need to ask, Lord, protect my children. I am the covenant…as the protector of my family.”(Vivian, female, 51 years old)
“…the one thing that Ma [grandmother] did was before she passed away, she said, you need to get the family together. But I never. I didn’t want to do that. Why should I be doing it? She had kids to do that.”(Danielle, female, 36 years old)
“My mother is the head of the household now. She took the lead after my grandmother when she was small and now it’s me. It’s the intergenerational expectations.”(Alice, female, 40 years old)
3.6. Caregiving
“I had to give a little push to finish. I had to get some substance just to uplift them, she’s got exams, keep her mind awake especially the stuff that she forgets.”(Joe, male, 47 years old)
“…[family] they do the washing and hang clothes a lot [by my mother and grandma]. My ma, she does the washing during the week and if she comes late to the house then she can only do it on the weekends. She’s only off on Sundays.”(Justin, adolescent boy)
“I must make food for them [babies]. I must take them out, let them play in the park. I must put some of them to sleep.”(Jessica, adolescent girl)
“I need to be on my knees for my family… I need to be in contact with the Lord to pray for my children, for their safety and their well-being for my family.”(Vivian, female, 51 years old)
“It’s toxic. Love is conditional and unaffectionate. It’s the black tax. I must give money to my mother… so it’s like a psychological binding or conditions for affection.”(Chloe, female, 29 years old)
“[Family] They see me with money. Miss money bags. With money bags. Because I always have and they always expect me to have. Sometimes I don’t have then they think I’m lying. But that is what they see me as. Here she comes, she’s got money.”(Saskia, female, 50 years old)
“My family…I just think of all the bad things I did to them. I feel like I never did something good in their eyes. They see me as a nuisance. We just argue. So, they refuse to help you. That’s why I never ask for help. Because you get left out.”(Basil, male, 46 years old)
3.7. Care Receiving
“I’m going to need that safe space. So, I will continuously look out for my safe space whenever I’m in need…let’s say for money or for a nice time or for food. That must be my safe space…I think regardless of gender, it’s the person that you feel from the go ahead, you established that relationship and that person made you feel wow. I hear you, I see you. I can support you in any life decisions that you make, whether it be good or bad, because even if it’s bad, that person can still steer you in the right direction.”(Eve, female, 52 years old)
“I will tell them, everyone close to me that makes me feel safe, that I want to make them feel safe, my children, mother, father. I will tell them like this, everyone who’s got respect for me, I will call ‘family’.”(Natalie, female, 38 years old)
“They take it [the need to receive care] somewhere else or their behavior becomes disruptive, then they look for other people, to like confide with, or even trust. That’s where their behavior escalates to addiction.”(Danielle, female, 36 years old)
3.8. Caring with
“We’ll watch a movie or study with my parents.”(Jack, adolescent boy)
“We go swim. My family. We swim. We play in the sand. We eat.”(Kyle, adolescent boy)
“We like to watch movies and stuff or like play games or like just listen to gospel and sing along.”(Justin, adolescent boy)
“My mother loves God and she knows and teaches us the rules, what to do and what not to do. I grow them up by myself and they are very understanding of each other. I was sick and then my eldest son was very concerned about me, that I must eat.”(Maddie, female, 57 years old)
“When we got out as a family together and just share our perspectives and our experiences and just be connected with each other on a human level…It is so important to spend time with each other because we don’t know what tomorrow holds…It is nice to know that we share a same bond where we can say that this is my family, this is who I relate to.”(Chantelle, female, 27 years old)
4. Discussion—A Care-Centered Model for Family Capabilities
4.1. Family Structures
4.2. Tangible and Intangible Care and the Consequences of Harms
4.3. How Care Is Shaped Relationally
4.4. Caring About
4.5. Caring for
4.6. Caregiving
4.7. Care Receiving
4.8. Caring with
4.9. Practical Application of the Model
4.10. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
CA | Capabilities Approach |
HCD | Human-Centered Design |
NDP | National Development Plan |
SIT | Social Identity Theory |
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Main Theme | Key Findings | Notable Results |
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1. Tangible Needs | Essential for physical/emotional stability (housing, food, jobs, communication). |
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2. Intangible Needs | Love, respect, and discipline foundational for emotional well-being. |
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3. Harms | Multifaceted: abuse, poverty, loss, and “bad care” (unequal responsibilities). |
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4. Caring About | Attentiveness to needs (financial, emotional, safety). |
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5. Caring For | Primarily shouldered by women (mothers/grandmothers). |
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6. Caregiving | Required competence (practical + emotional/spiritual support). |
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7. Care Receiving | Reciprocity hindered by pride, distrust, or cultural norms. |
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8. Caring With | Sustained through reciprocity, respect, and shared activities. |
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© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Reid, J.; Johannes, C.; Wareley, S.; Ngadhi, C.M.; Nginase, A.; Roman, N.V. A Conceptual Model for Strengthening Family Capabilities Through a Process of Care. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22, 1150. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22071150
Reid J, Johannes C, Wareley S, Ngadhi CM, Nginase A, Roman NV. A Conceptual Model for Strengthening Family Capabilities Through a Process of Care. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2025; 22(7):1150. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22071150
Chicago/Turabian StyleReid, James, Chanté Johannes, Shenaaz Wareley, Collen M. Ngadhi, Avukonke Nginase, and Nicolette V. Roman. 2025. "A Conceptual Model for Strengthening Family Capabilities Through a Process of Care" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 22, no. 7: 1150. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22071150
APA StyleReid, J., Johannes, C., Wareley, S., Ngadhi, C. M., Nginase, A., & Roman, N. V. (2025). A Conceptual Model for Strengthening Family Capabilities Through a Process of Care. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 22(7), 1150. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22071150