Health Literacy and Refugee Women During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Outlooks for ESL Classes

被引:1
作者
Golesorkhi, Lara-Zuzan [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Portland, Dept Polit Sci & Global Affairs, Portland, OR 97203 USA
关键词
refugee women; health literacy; English as a Second Language; ESL; COVID-19; CULTURE; BEHAVIORS; OUTCOMES; PERSPECTIVES; IMMIGRANTS;
D O I
10.25071/1920-7336.40903
中图分类号
C921 [人口统计学];
学科分类号
摘要
During the COVID-19 pandemic, refugee women in the United States faced tain their livelihoods, such as losing jobs and health care, becoming essential workers, and finding oneself again in unprecedented situations of limited mobility. These impacts reflect dynamics in migrant health literacy including language proficiency (skills-based approaches) as well as expe relations in society (socio-cultural approaches). In this article, I explore these dynamics through a gender perspective with a focus on intra-familial health brokering, empowerment-based health education, and health information mapping by drawing on ethnographic research from Portland, Oregon. This includes interviews with 15 refugee women and representatives of organizations working in the as observations of service-providing community efforts. My interviews and observations demonstrate that disruptions in language learning, socio-cultural barriers, and limited access to health-related information resources have posed significant challenges to refugee women's livelihoods during the pandemic. I suggest that English as a Second Language (ESL) classes can be imperative in addressing these challenges as the classes provide a space for language learning, intercultural dialogue, and information sharing in gender-responsive ways. significant challenges to sus-riences, identities, and power context of migration as well
引用
收藏
页码:7 / 13
页数:7
相关论文
共 45 条
[1]  
Andrews M.M., 2008, TRANSCULTURAL CONCEP
[2]  
Andrulis DP, 2007, AM J HEALTH BEHAV, V31, pS122
[3]  
Banulescu-Bogdan Natalia., 2020, Beyond Work: Reducing Social Isolation for Refugee Women and Other Marginalized Newcomers
[4]   Health risk and promotion behaviors in refugee populations [J].
Barnes, DM ;
Harrison, C ;
Heneghan, R .
JOURNAL OF HEALTH CARE FOR THE POOR AND UNDERSERVED, 2004, 15 (03) :347-356
[5]  
BOYD M, 2005, 6 UNRISD
[6]   Health Literacy Among Bhutanese Adult Refugees in the United States: The Sociocultural Approach [J].
Chao, Xia ;
Kang, Boping .
ADULT EDUCATION QUARTERLY, 2020, 70 (03) :258-276
[7]   Responding to the Complex and Gendered Needs of Refugee Women [J].
Deacon, Zermarie ;
Sullivan, Cris .
AFFILIA-JOURNAL OF WOMEN AND SOCIAL WORK, 2009, 24 (03) :272-284
[8]   How Medicaid and the state children's health insurance program can do a better job of insuring uninsured children: The perspectives of parents of uninsured Latino children [J].
Flores, G ;
Abreu, M ;
Brown, V ;
Tomany-Korman, SC .
AMBULATORY PEDIATRICS, 2005, 5 (06) :332-340
[9]  
Galanti G.A., 2008, Caring for patients from different cultures, V4th, DOI DOI 10.9783/9780812203479
[10]   Attitudes, knowledge, and health-seeking behaviors of five immigrant minority communities in the prevention and screening of cancer: A focus group approach [J].
Gany, FM ;
Herrera, AR ;
Avallone, M ;
Changrani, J .
ETHNICITY & HEALTH, 2006, 11 (01) :19-39