School of Public Health and Social Work, Queensland University of Technology, Kelvin Grove 4059, Australia.
Health Promot Int. 2023 Jun 1;38(3). doi: 10.1093/heapro/daad039.
Physical activity programs run by local government, public health and not-for-profit sectors are a key public health strategy for improving rates of physical activity within local communities. However, these programs are underutilized. This is especially the case among members of refugee-background communities whose participation could have far-ranging and multilevel benefits. To explore how greater engagement among refugee-background communities with these programs could be fostered in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, a qualitative study was undertaken from the perspectives of both community-based physical activity program providers and agencies involved in delivering services to refugee-background communities. This study involved a series of semi-structured interviews with a purposive sample of personnel from agencies that work with individuals and families from refugee-background communities and organizations that provide low-cost or no-cost physical activity programs and initiatives. Reflexive thematic analysis was used to interpret meaning from these data. Three themes relating to how participation in community-based physical activity programs could be improved among refugee-background communities were identified: improving cultural safety through intersectoral collaboration; confronting constraints imposed by the broader public health policy environment; and building capacity and empowering the community to diversify the sector. The findings highlight the importance of localized, deep-level intersectoral collaborations in bridging the gap between the health and social care needs of refugee-background communities and existing physical activity programs. However, a range of systems-produced barriers to the creation of such collaborations must be addressed to enable local actors to help mitigate and address the systemic exclusion of marginalized populations from participation in broader society.
由地方政府、公共卫生和非营利部门运营的体育活动项目是改善当地社区体育活动率的一项重要公共卫生策略。然而,这些项目并未得到充分利用。特别是在难民背景社区的成员中,这种情况更为明显,他们的参与可能会带来广泛而多层次的好处。为了探讨如何在澳大利亚昆士兰州布里斯班促进难民背景社区更多地参与这些项目,本研究从社区体育活动项目提供者和为难民背景社区提供服务的机构的角度出发,进行了一项定性研究。本研究对来自与难民背景社区的个人和家庭合作的机构以及提供低成本或免费体育活动项目和计划的组织的工作人员进行了一系列有针对性的半结构化访谈。使用反思性主题分析方法从这些数据中解释意义。确定了三个与如何提高难民背景社区参与社区体育活动项目相关的主题:通过跨部门合作提高文化安全性;应对更广泛的公共卫生政策环境造成的限制;以及建立能力并赋予社区权力,使该部门多样化。研究结果强调了本地化、深层次的跨部门合作在弥合难民背景社区的健康和社会关怀需求与现有体育活动项目之间差距的重要性。然而,必须解决一系列系统产生的合作障碍,以使地方行为者能够帮助减轻和解决边缘化人群被系统排除在更广泛的社会参与之外的问题。