IJERPH, Vol. 23, Pages 47: ‘A Dead Person Cannot Carry a Dead Person’: Health, Social Support and Language learning Among Syrian Refugees in Norway
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health doi: 10.3390/ijerph23010047
Authors:
Ayan B. Sheikh-Mohamed
Esperanza Diaz
Melanie Straiton
Arnfinn Jomar Andersen
Second language acquisition (SLA) is critical for refugee integration and a determinant of health and health care access. Although numerous studies have examined language barriers and health communication, the reciprocal relationship between health and second language acquisition remains underexplored in public health research. This qualitative study draws on interviews with twenty Syrian refugees (nine men and eleven women, aged 22-65) resettled in Norway. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews and analysed using reflexive thematic analysis. Two overarching themes were identified: (1) Learning under strain: health problems and post-migratory stressors constrained SLA; and (2) Relational support: reciprocal interactions with neighbours, colleagues, and volunteers enabled both language learning and functional health. These social arenas acted as low-threshold, health-promoting settings that mitigated isolation and strengthened belonging. The study highlights that language operates as a social determinant of health: inclusive, relational spaces facilitate both SLA and health by enhancing communicative participation and access to care. Refugee integration policy should therefore support accessible community spaces outside formal education to strengthen social inclusion, health literacy and refugees’ ability to navigate health and welfare services.
Source link
Ayan B. Sheikh-Mohamed www.mdpi.com
