Abstract
AbstractThe presence of Africans in Chinese cities has made their healthcare-related issues an expanding area of interest. However, previous studies have not thoroughly explored how Africans live through health problems. This article explores the taken for granted aspect using the analytical frameworks of migration as a social determinant of health and phenomenological sociology. Based on interviews with 37 Nigerians in Guangzhou city, it describes how health and illnesses are lived and the ways that language barrier, cost of health care, immigration status and racism and discrimination intertwine with quotidian occurrences to shape the experiences of health challenges. Migrant networks and community structure provided critical assistance, but the context of labour circumstances and undocumentedness can overstretch these critical sources of support. The article exposes how the broader context of being and living in China determine how Africans experience health challenges in Chinese cities.
Funder
University of the Witwatersrand
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Anthropology,Cultural Studies,Demography
Reference80 articles.
1. Abdulkadir, L. S., Mottelson, I. N., & Nielsen, D. (2019). Why does the patient not show up? Clinical case studies in a Danish migrant health clinic. European Journal for Person Centered Healthcare, 7(2), 316–324.
2. Adams, C. J. (2016). Structure and agency: Africana immigrants in China. In A. Bodomo (Ed.), Africans in China: Guangdong and Beyond (pp. 89–118). Diasporic Africa Press.
3. Adebayo, K. O. (2022). Pandemics and management of “dangerous communities”: Ebola, Covid-19 and Africans in China. The Professional Geographer, 75(1), 164–174. https://doi.org/10.1080/00330124.2022.2048867
4. Adebayo, K. O., & Omololu, F. O. (2020). ‘Everywhere is home’: The paradox of ‘homing’and child upbringing among Nigerian-Chinese families in Guangzhou city. International Sociology, 35(3), 241–259.
5. Adebayo, K. O., & Njoku, E. T. (2023). Local and transnational identity, positionality and knowledge production in Africa and the African diaspora. Field Methods, 35(1), 18–32.