“We Want to See Youth That Would Be Better People Than Us”: A Case Report on Addressing Adolescent Substance Use in Rural South Africa
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Setting and Participant Selection
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Findings: The Sibanye Case
We are a group of 10 African women, different ages, different religions. We came together because we wanted to fight substance abuse and all the other things that come after it, like crime, teenage pregnancies, and school dropout.
We are passionate about making a change in our community. We want to see youth that would be better people than us and make Sea Vista a better place.
My role is to be a role model. I’m talking to girls, trying to make them better people, aware that life is not as easy as they think and to stay away from the dangers that are happening in our community, especially drugs, crime, and abstain from sex so that we won’t have more teenage pregnancies.
It’s about self-esteem, making them aware of the dangers that are happening in our society with drugs, and crime. Just encouraging them to work hard at school. So that’s the empowering. With the girls, we talk about if you do unprotected sex then you become pregnant or you become sick. So my main thing is to actually tell them to abstain until they are old enough to actually know what to do.
We teach the boys how to respect the girls because most of the boys don’t respect girls. They must know when girls say no they must accept that.
And another reason why we have these activities—netball, reading, sewing, reading—is to keep them busy. They’ve got so much time for themselves and that is the time that they do wrong things.
Sea Vista is a place where, those employed, work mostly in shops (as cashiers) or houses (as gardeners and house cleaners). Therefore, when it comes to income the income is very low. For a parent to take a child to college or university, those things are not possible.
Another thing that the youth are facing is unemployment. We do not have factories in Sea Vista so the unemployment number is high. That is why you see crime going up and it’s mostly (because of) drugs.
What I would say about children in Sea Vista is some are privileged, some are not. (…) it is 10% or even 5% that is privileged, because we have parents that are not working at all. There is no income.
Some companies say we want a person with five years’ experience. How do you expect a person from Sea Vista to have five years of experience?
Moreover, another problem, we do not have a high school in Sea Vista. Like now, the problem that we are facing is we have children that have to go to Humansdorp [neighboring town about 6 miles away] for the high school.
We need a safe place where you can lock everything because we have to put our stuff in there, it must be safe so that no one can go in there and steal because with these drugs they just break in and take everything to sell.
Vandalism in Sea Vista is happening [firstly] because of drugs. When there is a shop and they realize that there is not enough security they vandalize because they want to steal the stuff to sell. And [secondly], they don’t respect or love their community enough because if you love your community and you see a paper on the ground you pick it up.
It is because our children or the parents do not have the relevant resources. That is why all of them end up just sitting at home and doing nothing.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics (n = 9) | n (%) |
---|---|
Gender | |
Male | 0 (0) |
Female | 9(100) |
Ethnicity | |
Colored (mixed race) | 6 (67) |
Black | 3 (33) |
Education level | |
Some High School | 5 |
Grade 12 | 2 |
College | 2 |
Marital status | |
Married | 5 |
Single | 4 |
Children under 18 years | |
4 | 1 (11) |
3 | 2 (22) |
2 | 4 (45) |
1 | 2 (22) |
0 | 0 (0) |
Household income (monthly—ZAR) | |
<1000 | 1 (11) |
1000–4999 | 4 (45) |
5000–9999 | 3 (33) |
>10,000 | 1 (11) |
Mean (SD) | |
Age | 41.4 (9.76) |
Length of stay in community | 20.3 (7.9) |
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David, I.; Wegner, L.; Majee, W. “We Want to See Youth That Would Be Better People Than Us”: A Case Report on Addressing Adolescent Substance Use in Rural South Africa. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 3493. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043493
David I, Wegner L, Majee W. “We Want to See Youth That Would Be Better People Than Us”: A Case Report on Addressing Adolescent Substance Use in Rural South Africa. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(4):3493. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043493
Chicago/Turabian StyleDavid, Ifeolu, Lisa Wegner, and Wilson Majee. 2023. "“We Want to See Youth That Would Be Better People Than Us”: A Case Report on Addressing Adolescent Substance Use in Rural South Africa" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 4: 3493. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043493
APA StyleDavid, I., Wegner, L., & Majee, W. (2023). “We Want to See Youth That Would Be Better People Than Us”: A Case Report on Addressing Adolescent Substance Use in Rural South Africa. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(4), 3493. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043493