Immigrant Perspectives of Social Connection in a Nontraditional Migration Area
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants and Community Partners
2.2. Setting
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
- (1)
- Lens of the individual
- (2)
- Immigrant experience
- (3)
- Interpersonal support
- (4)
- Community belonging
- (5)
- Community capital
- (6)
- Community navigation
- (7)
- Social acceptance
3.1. Lens of the Individual
3.2. Immigrant Experience
3.3. Interpersonal Support
3.4. Community Belonging
3.5. Community Capital
There was a library close to my work. It was a divine library and the biggest one. I really enjoyed being there. I would be tired or hungry, but I would use the computer there to communicate with my family. I’d use the library to take classes and learn how to read in English. I would take classes and then I knew more people that I related to more. I started to feel that warmth of human connection.
3.6. Community Navigation
To ask for a service, you have to jump around. I call one place, which gives me another phone number for another place, and then to another place, and another place, and another place. And if you don’t speak English, just forget it! You have to call with someone who can speak English or who can help support you there. The first answer you are going to get is that you have to stay in line, and then they ask you for an email. To get the resource, you have to have an email address. So, I consider myself extremely fortunate that I can give an email address and that I can find that help, but not all Latinos have that capability.
In Cincinnati, there are groups of different races and other groups that are superior. It makes me feel less for being Latina. It’s something that has happened to me… especially when I go to events alone, and I’m the only Latino; I feel that I’m not the same. But when I am in my community, I feel the same as everyone; I feel included. When I go to other events, I feel different, like I’m not supposed to be there.
3.7. Social Acceptance
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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Demographic Characteristic | Frequency | Percent |
---|---|---|
Country of Origin | ||
Guatemala | 11 | 29% |
Mexico | 9 | 24% |
Venezuela | 9 | 24% |
Colombia | 2 | 5% |
Honduras | 2 | 5% |
El Salvador | 2 | 5% |
Dominican Republic | 1 | 3% |
Ecuador | 1 | 3% |
Panama | 1 | 3% |
Current Location | ||
Ohio | 29 | 76 |
Kentucky | 8 | 21 |
Indiana | 1 | 3 |
Children | ||
Yes | 24 | 63 |
No | 8 | 21 |
Not Reported | 6 | 16 |
Age | ||
18–30 | 11 | 29 |
31–40 | 13 | 34 |
41–50 | 7 | 18 |
51–60 | 3 | 8 |
61–71 | 3 | 8 |
Not Reported | 1 | 3 |
Years Living in the USA | ||
Less than 1 year | 4 | 11 |
1 year | 6 | 16 |
2–10 years | 11 | 29 |
11–20 years | 7 | 18 |
21–30 years | 5 | 13 |
31–40 years | 2 | 5 |
Gender | ||
Female | 22 | 58 |
Male | 16 | 42 |
Domain | Example Quotations (Translated to English) |
---|---|
Lens of the individual | “Well, yes, of course someone can get out of hard situations. Someone has to fight for it and to stay positive to be able to get up after a negative situation.” “The thing is that I try not to bother other people, and I cover my own necessities…so I don’t have to sit there and ask over and over again for help. That’s not me.” “If you put your mind to it…we can achieve anything. I think the barriers we have are put on by ourselves.” |
Immigrant experience | “You identify yourself in the place where you are, but there is a lot I do not know…one is always waiting to answer the question of ’is this my place?’” “It’s hard for Hispanics to communicate in a purely American environment. If I knew English, I would communicate more with my American neighbors. I can’t really have a strong relationship with Americans because of the language barrier.” “As Hispanics, we are a little afraid as many of us don’t have documents or can’t work here legally. Not all Hispanics feel supported.” |
Interpersonal support | “Happiness, we try to establish it, not just by focusing on work and getting home but by taking time as a family, having dinner together, talking about how our day went. We try as a family to be more united.” “Social media, I use it in a good way to talk to my family, although it’s not the same as talking face to face, but they have helped me a lot, and my friends have helped, too…I have two group chats, and we talk there and give each other advice.” “I am retired. So, when you’re retired, your circles shrink…volunteering permits me to meet other people of all kinds with whom I did not have connections before. We would have never crossed each other’s paths, so it’s a very enriching experience.” |
Community belonging | “In places like where we play soccer, everyone gets together… doing some kind of celebration like a birthday celebration. The networks are there, and they are connected, and they do trust each other.” “Some don’t like immigrants in their country, but here in Cincinnati, we have had a very good welcome, and there are many people who have welcomed us with open arms who are willing to help us, and that makes us happy. It makes us feel good. I can’t imagine feeling rejection because it brings negative emotions or the emotions that make us feel bad and make us sick.” “I feel connected more to the community in Cincinnati. The community in Indiana is a very separate community. Everyone is in their own world; people are just with their work, people are with their families. But I don’t feel connected to any one of them.” |
Community capital | “I think social support is when someone is connected with a place or institution that one trusts…there isn’t one place that can help with everything, but this place of trust could refer one to other resources.” “I use Facebook because here in the United States, they use this app a lot to find information, like a marketplace to buy things, and I also use it because I can see cultural events and family events that are happening nearby, or if there is a park nearby to take my son.” “Twenty-three years ago, there was nothing…it was very, very difficult, but nowadays there is a lot of help, and I know that there are people who benefit…Even if you don’t speak the language, there’s always someone to advise or guide you.” |
Community navigation | “This community is very welcoming. Not everyone will open doors to others, not physically, but they at least guide them to where they need to be.” “I think it’s all the same unknowns and search for a center—an area where someone can say, ‘this is an area for Latinos’ so they can live without fear, for people who don’t know how to communicate, to help find information such as how to get help either to get a job or find housing.” “ I could not get any communication with anyone about where they would recommend for us to go. It is very difficult to be in this country, to provide for our kids, to take our kids to the doctor. It’s very hard to get medical help when we are sick.” |
Social acceptance | “Normally, when I deal with Latinos, they tell me the same thing. That they are alone and that they don’t feel included or accepted. More than anything, they don’t feel accepted. I think it depends a lot on the economy; the less your finances are, the less accepted you are. The better your finances are, the more you will be accepted. And it also has to do with physical features and what country you are from because every country has a different treatment in Latin America. Some worse than others.” “I have friends who suddenly feel that others look at them differently because they’re Latina, but it has never happened to me…here if you go to the supermarket, people are respectful and say good morning and thank you. I think that is a part of being accepted and seen in a good way and that you feel that you are part of a society.” “I think that one can feel accepted here when one learns how to live here, respects the laws here, and learns the differences of how others live. We need to learn that Americans have another way of living and accept and respect that. One needs to try to communicate in English and acculturate.” |
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Jacquez, F.; Vaughn, L.M.; Hardy-Besaw, J. Immigrant Perspectives of Social Connection in a Nontraditional Migration Area. Healthcare 2024, 12, 686. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12060686
Jacquez F, Vaughn LM, Hardy-Besaw J. Immigrant Perspectives of Social Connection in a Nontraditional Migration Area. Healthcare. 2024; 12(6):686. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12060686
Chicago/Turabian StyleJacquez, Farrah, Lisa M. Vaughn, and Jamie Hardy-Besaw. 2024. "Immigrant Perspectives of Social Connection in a Nontraditional Migration Area" Healthcare 12, no. 6: 686. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12060686
APA StyleJacquez, F., Vaughn, L. M., & Hardy-Besaw, J. (2024). Immigrant Perspectives of Social Connection in a Nontraditional Migration Area. Healthcare, 12(6), 686. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12060686