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Asymmetry in an uneven place: migrants' lifestyles, social capital, and self-rated health status in James Town, Accra

Asymmetry in an uneven place: migrants' lifestyles, social capital, and self-rated health status in James Town, Accra

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dc.contributor.author Tutu, Raymond Asare
dc.contributor.author Boateng, John Kwame
dc.contributor.author Busingye, Janice Desire
dc.contributor.author Ameyaw, Edmund
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-01T21:57:49Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-01T21:57:49Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.identifier.issn 0343-2521
dc.identifier.uri http://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/48020
dc.description.abstract This exploratory study examines how migrants' lifestyles are associated with subjective assessment of their health status in a relatively poor urban neighborhood in Accra. For more than half a century, urban centers have been on the receiving end of internal migrants in Ghana with Accra, Kumasi, and Sekondi-Takoradi receiving the lion's share. However, a lot of migrants end up in poor neighborhoods due to inability to afford relatively costly rents in the better residential areas in the cities. Migrants who live on the margins of society are adversely impacted by poor environmental conditions that make them susceptible to environmentally-induced diseases such as malaria, cholera, and typhoid. While the poverty, health, and place research in Accra, Ghana, have focused on spatial distribution of inequalities in health, burden of sexual ill health, double burden of diseases, environment, wealth and health relationship, as well as income and health connections, there is paucity of research on association between the daily lifestyles of migrants in poor urban neighborhoods and their health status. Specifically on lifestyle and contextual factors, we examine (1) eating and drinking behavior, (2) perception of environmental factors, (3) attitudes and practices during illnesses, and (4) physical activities. Results from Ordinal Logit Regression models suggest that the key predictors of self-rated health status are: (1) socio-demographic elements like length of stay, job type, and religiosity; and (2) eating and drinking behavior-frequency of buying food from food vendors, and (3) social capital.
dc.description.sponsorship Academic Enrichment Fund grant, Delaware State University
dc.language English
dc.publisher SPRINGER
dc.relation.ispartof Geojournal
dc.subject Health
dc.subject Migration
dc.subject Social Capital
dc.subject Accra
dc.subject Lifestyle
dc.subject Diseases
dc.title Asymmetry in an uneven place: migrants' lifestyles, social capital, and self-rated health status in James Town, Accra
dc.type Article
dc.identifier.isi 000413606100003
dc.identifier.doi 10.1007/s10708-016-9723-1
dc.publisher.city DORDRECHT
dc.publisher.address VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
dc.identifier.eissn 1572-9893
dc.identifier.volume 82
dc.identifier.issue 5
dc.identifier.spage 907
dc.identifier.epage 921
dc.subject.wc Geography
dc.subject.sc Geography
dc.description.pages 15
dc.subject.kwp Greater Accra
dc.subject.kwp Urban
dc.subject.kwp Ghana
dc.subject.kwp Vulnerabilities
dc.subject.kwp Religiosity
dc.subject.kwp Experiences
dc.subject.kwp Prevalence
dc.subject.kwp Resilience
dc.subject.kwp Migration
dc.subject.kwp Poverty
dc.description.affiliation Delaware State Univ, Dover, DE 19901 USA
dc.description.affiliation Univ Ghana, Legon, Accra, Ghana
dc.description.affiliation Makerere Univ, Kampala, Uganda
dc.description.affiliation Howard Univ, Washington, DC 20059 USA
dc.description.email rtutu@desu.edu
dc.description.corr Tutu, RA (corresponding author), Delaware State Univ, Dover, DE 19901 USA.
dc.description.orcid AMEYAW, EDMUND ESSAH/0000-0002-6999-3077


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