Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Interdisciplinary Medical Sciences, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2024 Apr 30;19(4):e0302591. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0302591. eCollection 2024.
Newcomers (immigrants, refugees, and international students) face many personal, gender, cultural, environmental and health system barriers when integrating into a new society. These struggles can affect their health and social care, reducing access to mental health care. This study explores the lived experiences of African and Middle Eastern newcomers to Ontario, Canada. An understanding of newcomer integration challenges, successes and social justice issues is needed to improve health equity and social services.
In this qualitative study, we used a participatory research approach to collect stories reflecting participants' integration perspectives and experiences. Beginning with our immigrant community network, we used snowball sampling to recruit newcomers, ages 18 to 30, originating from Africa or the Middle East. We used qualitative narrative analysis to interpret stories, identifying context themes, integrating related barriers and facilitators, and resolutions and learnings. We shared our findings and sought final feedback from our participants.
A total of 18 newcomers, 78% female and approximately half post-secondary students, participated in the study. Participants described an unknown and intimidating migration context, with periods of loneliness and isolation aggravated by cold winter conditions and unfamiliar language and culture. Amidst the struggles, the support of friends and family, along with engaging in schoolwork, exploring new learning opportunities, and participating in community services, all facilitated integration and forged new resilience.
Community building, friendships, and local services emerged as key elements for future immigrant service research. Utilizing a participatory health research approach allowed us to respond to the call for social justice-oriented research that helps to generate scientific knowledge for promoting culturally adaptive health care and access for marginalized populations.
新移民(移民、难民和国际学生)在融入新社会时,面临着许多个人、性别、文化、环境和卫生系统方面的障碍。这些困难可能会影响他们的健康和社会关怀,减少获得心理健康护理的机会。本研究探讨了安大略省非洲和中东新移民的生活经历。需要了解新移民融入的挑战、成功和社会公正问题,以改善健康公平和社会服务。
在这项定性研究中,我们使用参与式研究方法收集反映参与者融入视角和经验的故事。从我们的移民社区网络开始,我们使用滚雪球抽样招募年龄在 18 至 30 岁之间、来自非洲或中东的新移民。我们使用定性叙事分析来解释故事,确定背景主题,整合相关的障碍和促进因素,以及解决办法和经验教训。我们分享了我们的发现,并寻求参与者的最终反馈。
共有 18 名新移民参加了这项研究,其中 78%为女性,约一半是大专学生。参与者描述了一个未知且令人生畏的移民背景,孤独和孤立的时期加剧了冬季的寒冷和陌生的语言和文化。在挣扎中,朋友和家人的支持,以及参与学业、探索新的学习机会和参与社区服务,都促进了融入并培养了新的适应力。
社区建设、友谊和当地服务成为未来移民服务研究的关键要素。采用参与式健康研究方法,使我们能够回应社会公正导向的研究呼吁,为促进边缘化人群的文化适应健康护理和获得提供科学知识。