| Literature DB >> 30902080 |
Chunyan Yu1,2, Chaohua Lou2, Yan Cheng3, Yuanqi Cui1,2,4, Qiguo Lian1,2, Ziliang Wang1,2, Ersheng Gao2, Ling Wang5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: China is experiencing a sizeable rural-urban flow, which may influence the health of internal migrant youth deeply. Disadvantages in the city are highly likely to contribute to health issues among the young internal migrant population. The current qualitative study is to explore how internal migrant young people view the health issues they face, and the services and opportunities they could seek in their host community.Entities:
Keywords: Health equity; Health seeking barriers; Internal migrant youth; Qualitative study; Thematic analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30902080 PMCID: PMC6431074 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-6661-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Description of the sample
| Migrant Youth’s Activity | ||||
| IDI %(n) | PV %(n) | CMG %(n) | ||
| Age | 15–17 | 52.2(12) | 62.5(5) | 40.7(24) |
| 18–19 | 47.8(11) | 37.5(3) | 59.3(35) | |
| Gender | Female | 43.6 (10) | 62.5(5) | 49.2(29) |
| Male | 56.5 (13) | 37.5(3) | 50.9(30) | |
| Educational level | <Middle school | 56.5(13) | 50.0(4) | 1.7(1) |
| completed middle school | 30.4(7) | 37.5(3) | 52.5(31) | |
| High school (incl. undergrad) | 13.0(3) | 12.5(1) | 42.4(25) | |
| College/University or above | – | – | 3.4 (2) | |
| Hometown | Henan Province | 17.4(4) | 50.0(4) | 13.2(7) |
| Anhui Province | 34.8(8) | 37.5(3) | 49.1(26) | |
| Jiangsu Province | 8.7(2) | – | 22.6(12) | |
| Other | 39.1(9) | 12.5(1) | 15.1(8) | |
| Working Status | Student | 21.7(5) | – | 35.6(21) |
| No job, seeking jobs | – | 25.0(2) | 25.4(15) | |
| No job, not seeking jobs | – | 25.0(2) | 1.7(1) | |
| Full time worker | 78.3(18) | 50.0(4) | 37.3(22) | |
| Average Years Staying in Shanghai (Mean ± SD) | 3.1 ± 3.5 | 3.6 ± 3.5 | 5.4 ± 6.1 | |
| Adults’ Activity | ||||
| KII %(n) | ||||
| Gender | Female | 85.0(17) | ||
| Male | 15.0(3) | |||
| Occupation | Social worker | 15.0(3) | ||
| Township officer | 20.0(4) | |||
| Neighborhood officer | 30.0(6) | |||
| Community Physician | 10.0(2) | |||
| School health teacher | 10.0(2) | |||
| School head/ideological teacher | 10.0(2) | |||
| Chair of the women’s union in an industrial park | 5.0(1) | |||
| Average Years working with migrant youth (Mean ± SD) | 6.0 ± 3.5 | |||
Major categories, themes and correlated analytic framework targeted
| Major categories and themes | Ecological systems theory | Acculturation theory |
|---|---|---|
| Understanding of health | ||
| Physical well-being | ||
| Mental well-being | ||
| Social well-being | ||
| Major health issues in host community | Outcomes | Health Outcomes |
| Mental health | ||
| Smoking | ||
| Violence | ||
| Reproductive health | ||
| Health seeking and host city adaptation | Outcomes | Adaptation Outcomes |
| Sources of health information | ||
| Health services utilization | ||
| Opportunities (on education/career) | ||
| Factors related to health seeking and city adaptation | Stressors and/or buffers | |
| Economic status | Microsystem level factors of outcomes | Coping strategies |
| Coping resources | ||
| Accessibility to community services | Exosystem level factors of outcomes | Social support |
| Family, peer support/social network | ||
| Hukou registration status | Macrosystem level factors of outcomes | Societal attitudes |
Fig. 1Keep healthy by taking exercise. “Playing basketball is a healthy lifestyle for adolescents, it can keep you fit, can help you grow taller, it also can help relieve stresses. We should promote such a lifestyle.” (Photographed and explained by a female PV participant of 16 years old.)
Fig. 2The inconvenience after the rain. “There is a sunken area without a drainage system besides our neighborhood. It causes inconvenience to the passers-by every time it rains.” (Photographed and explained by a female PV participant of 18 years old.)
Fig. 3A community map indicating migrants’ living environments and accessible facilities. The places where internal migrants live concentratedly were drawn on the lower left part of the paper, meaning migrants’ living places were in the fringe area of the community. (Drawn by internal migrant youth of CMG activity, female, 18–19 years old group.)
Fig. 4Tired of the work of moving goods. “He is very young; he is trying to make money by uploading and downloading goods. You could see that the floating young people’s life here is not easy at all. With no skills and poor education, it seems hard for him to get a better job.” (Photographed and explained by a female PV participant of 16 years old.)