Alcohol, Other Drugs Use and Mental Health among African Migrant Youths in South Australia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Migration and Resettlement of African Refugees
1.2. Migrants and Refugee Youths, Alcohol and Other Drug Use and Mental Health
1.3. Aims of the Study
2. Methods
2.1. Theoretical Framework
2.2. Study Design and Recruitment of Participants
2.3. Ethical Considerations
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Findings
3.1. Characteristics of the Study Participants
3.2. Pre-Migration Contexts and Losses
I don’t have parents. My mum passed away. And most of these young people here they don’t have like family and some of them might have a mum, but they don’t have a dad. And they might struggle with the family, but most of them don’t talk about it.(Participant 21)
All my parents and the other families stayed in South Sudan. So, we first went to Uganda, we stayed there for a couple of months, in the northern part of Uganda. At the time, it wasn’t safe; there was no difference between Northern Uganda and South Sudan because of the war in South Sudan and the Lord Resistance Army operating in Northern Uganda. We stayed there for a couple of months, but every night was a nightmare. We moved from Northern Uganda, and we went to Kenya, and we arrived in Kenya in 1995. So, we stayed in the refugee camp from 1995 until 2003 when we finally came to Australia.(Participant 14)
Before I came to Australia, I didn’t know that I had a family. When I came to Australia, people started calling me up and saying, ‘we are your parents’, and I just said, ‘oh my God’. I didn’t know my family because during the war you don’t live with your parents.(Participant 20)
Because of the war, I was in a camp. I started my education there from year three to year 12. When I came to Australia, I went to the factory, I work. I decided to marry, so I went back home and proposed my wife to come to Australia. My wife came with three boys, one is my nephew, and two are cousins. So, from there, I decided not to go back to school because it has been a long time plus I have personal issues.(Participant 22)
3.3. Post-Migration Contexts and Realities
Coming to Australia was a sudden thing, like ‘oh you’re coming to this new place’. Like I was young and so didn’t know how it was.(Participant 16)
I know a few people even now they don’t have Centrelink [social security assistance in Australia] money and they don’t have an income. They just live with their parents, but the parents are poor too, they don’t give them an income. They are looking for work, but they can’t get a job, so they have to survive like that.(Participant 20)
Young people in our community, they have no access to jobs—and because they don’t have access to jobs, they find something to keep themselves busy. Also, because we come from Africa, some of us don’t know English. Some of us, they came here they don’t have parents—their parents died—and they come when they are single… like the cause of all the bad thing is because you don’t have a good quality of life, and if you don’t have a good quality of life, you think you can do bad things.(Participant 5)
They’ll be like saying they’re looking for work, but they’re not going to get a job because of their low level of skill. They can’t get a job, and they’ll be like ‘what can we do?’(Participant 20)
It goes back to the main problems like depression, anxiety, all these kinds of things. When you start to experience those kinds of things, then you tend to put your problems into alcohol to forget the problems.(Participant 14)
When they get depressed what I see a lot and is more common, is they tend to drink alcohol a lot. They tend to drink and pretty much do things like maybe smoking weed and all that stuff.(Participant 21)
3.4. Contextualising AOD Use and Mental Health
When you have friends that take alcohol or other drugs, so you tend to follow so that if you want to fit into that friendship or that company, you have to do what they do.’(Participant 15)
I have some of my friends here, they use drugs, they ask me … they give me—like smoking or drinking.(Participant 13)
If you become frustrated, maybe people don’t pay respect to you sometimes. You say there is nothing to fear again because I already lost that reputation’. That’s the most important thing in my community, is if you lose that reputation in the community it’s very hard to get it back.(Participant 15)
They come to drug and drinking alcohol because sometimes their relationships break up. They start smoking, and they start drinking, and they start using drugs. And they think doing these things can help them.(Participant 13)
Well because it’s a new environment whereby if you have the money you can buy whatever you have and there’s the freedom—so the parents are going to advise their kids, but they do not listen to their parents.(Participant 3)
There is alcohol in Africa, but there’s a way if you’re going to drink alcohol—and you know there’s no Centrelink—if you’re going to drink alcohol you’re going to die because you’re not going to have any other help.(Participant 7)
Well, I think alcohol is a health issue because a lot of young people are drinking alcohol. The way I see it, drinking is not the problem, but it’s the amount of alcohol they drink at one time is the problem because if you drink too much, then it becomes heavy on you.(Participant 14)
Underage drinking has become a problem because a lot of young boys, a lot of young girls under the age of 18 are drinking heavily. And as a result of that, they end up doing a lot of silly things like sexual offences. So they expose themselves into sex earlier because of alcohol and drugs. Young people, as young as 15 and 16, you know, just because they drink and take drugs too they become vulnerable to older people that hang out with them.(Participant 14)
I think that [alcohol] is dangerous. It leads to a lot of disasters because it makes—teenagers especially when they have alcohol they lose control, they don’t know how to handle that or control their emotions and stuff like that. They start arguing, they start fighting and stuff like that, so I think it’s a big problem for teenagers.(Participant 8)
If their mind is not working, like sometimes if you take alcohol, you know that cause actually somebody to commit suicide.(Participant 6)
You know mostly these young kids, they tend to drink and with other people making troubles. They drink, and then they try to kill each other and make themselves suicide because of those factors.(Participant 5)
4. Discussion
Limitations and Strengths
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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|
Extracted Texts | Codes | Themes |
---|---|---|
| Separations and fragmentations of families | Pre-migration contexts and losses |
| Lack of opportunities and access to jobs | |
| Living in refugee camps under difficult circumstances | |
| Low skills and poor employment outcomes | Post-migration contexts and realities |
| Impacts of poverty and unemployment | |
| Cultural differences |
Participants | Gender | Age at Data Collection | Country of Origin | Year Arrived in Adelaide |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Male | 18 | DRC | 2010 |
2 | Male | 20 | South Sudan | 2008 |
3 | Female | 21 | Liberia | 2010 |
4 | Male | 23 | South Sudan | 2009 |
5 | Male | 20 | South Sudan | 2011 |
6 | Male | 23 | Ethiopia | 2003 |
7 | Female | 24 | Liberia | 2004 |
8 | Male | 20 | Burundi | 2007 |
9 | Male | 23 | South Sudan | 2007 |
10 | Male | 25 | South Sudan | 2007 |
11 | Male | 21 | Liberia | 2008 |
12 | Male | 22 | DRC | 2005 |
13 | Female | 25 | South Sudan | 2003 |
14 | Female | 23 | South Sudan | 2005 |
15 | Male | 20 | South Sudan | 2005 |
16 | Female | 25 | South Sudan | 2008 |
17 | Female | 21 | Liberia | 2008 |
18 | Male | 25 | South Sudan | 2006 |
19 | Male | 25 | South Sudan | 2003 |
20 | Male | 20 | South Sudan | 2001 |
21 | Male | 25 | South Sudan | 2006 |
22 | Female | 18 | Liberia | 2005 |
23 | Female | 23 | South Sudan | 2003 |
Participants | Gender | Age at Data Collection | Country of Origin | Year Arrived in Adelaide |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Male | 25 | South Sudan | 2000 |
2 | Female | 20 | Liberia | 2005 |
3 | Female | 21 | Somalia | 2001 |
4 | Female | 23 | Burundi | 2005 |
5 | Female | 20 | Liberia | 2005 |
6 | Female | 23 | Ghana | 2004 |
7 | Female | 24 | Ethiopia | 2005 |
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Mwanri, L.; Mude, W. Alcohol, Other Drugs Use and Mental Health among African Migrant Youths in South Australia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 1534. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041534
Mwanri L, Mude W. Alcohol, Other Drugs Use and Mental Health among African Migrant Youths in South Australia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(4):1534. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041534
Chicago/Turabian StyleMwanri, Lillian, and William Mude. 2021. "Alcohol, Other Drugs Use and Mental Health among African Migrant Youths in South Australia" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 4: 1534. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041534
APA StyleMwanri, L., & Mude, W. (2021). Alcohol, Other Drugs Use and Mental Health among African Migrant Youths in South Australia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(4), 1534. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041534