Hilario Carla T, Oliffe John L, Wong Josephine P, Browne Annette J, Johnson Joy L
1 School of Nursing, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
2 Daphne Cockwell School of Nursing, Ryerson University, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Am J Mens Health. 2018 Mar;12(2):210-220. doi: 10.1177/1557988317743384. Epub 2017 Nov 28.
In recent years, the experiences of immigrant and refugee young men have drawn attention worldwide. Human-induced environmental disasters, local and global conflicts, and increasingly inequitable distributions of wealth have shaped transnational migration patterns. Canada is home to a large immigrant and refugee population, particularly in its urban areas, and supporting the mental health and well-being of these communities is of critical importance. The aim of this article is to report findings from a qualitative study on the social context of mental health among immigrant and refugee young men, with a focus on their migration and resettlement experiences. Informed by the conceptual lens of social context, a thematic narrative analysis approach was used to examine qualitative data from individual and group interviews with 33 young men (age 15 to 22 years) self-identified as immigrants or refugees and were living in Greater Vancouver, western Canada. Three thematic narratives were identified: a better life, living the (immigrant) dream, and starting again from way below. The narratives characterized the social context for immigrant and refugee young men and were connected by a central theme of negotiating second-class citizenship. Implications include the need for mental health frameworks that address marginalization and take into account the contexts and discourses that shape the mental health of immigrant and refugee populations in Canada and worldwide.
近年来,移民和难民青年男性的经历已引起全球关注。人为导致的环境灾难、局部和全球冲突以及日益不平等的财富分配塑造了跨国移民模式。加拿大是大量移民和难民的家园,尤其是在其城市地区,支持这些群体的心理健康和福祉至关重要。本文旨在报告一项关于移民和难民青年男性心理健康社会背景的定性研究结果,重点关注他们的移民和重新安置经历。以社会背景的概念视角为指导,采用主题叙事分析方法,对来自33名自认为是移民或难民且居住在加拿大西部大温哥华地区的青年男性(年龄在15至22岁之间)的个人访谈和小组访谈的定性数据进行了分析。确定了三个主题叙事:更好的生活、实现(移民)梦想以及从极低起点重新开始。这些叙事描绘了移民和难民青年男性的社会背景,并通过一个关于协商二等公民身份的核心主题相互关联。其影响包括需要建立心理健康框架,以解决边缘化问题,并考虑到塑造加拿大乃至全球移民和难民群体心理健康的背景和话语。