Tri-County Vanguard

Building community connection­s

Newcomers Peer Support Group begins in Yarmouth

- KATHY JOHNSON TRI-COUNTY VANGUARD kathy.johnson @tricountyv­anguard.ca

A Newcomers Peer Support Group that was launched in Yarmouth in January is getting lots of takers. pilot project supported by the Canadian Mental Health Associatio­n Nova Scotia Division (CMHANS), the Mental Health Foundation of Nova Scotia, Southwest Employment Services, YReach and the Nova Scotia Health Authority, the new group has been several years in the making.

“This is a group we have been planning for a number of years,” says CMHANS executive cirector Karn Nichols. “It’s a pilot project that we are incubating in Yarmouth. I suspect there may be small pockets of informal gatherings happening across the province, however, I am not aware of anything that has been formalized the way we have in Yarmouth.

"In speaking with Elizabeth (Zavala Nunez, the settlement staff member of YReach/ YMCA), this is a model they are excited about and are keen to replicate (in) other areas of the province. I believe there is potential to do just that, given the feedback we have had to date.”

The group meets every other Thursday in person at the

Nova Scotia Community College (NSCC) Burridge Campus from 5 to 7 p.m. and is open to anyone who is new to Canada. The next meeting is Feb. 15.

“We know that newcomers in general have a unique set of challenges coming to a new country, let alone a rural area of that new country. Not only do they need to navigate the same challenges we do regarding housing and transporta­tion, but they have to do it with no social safety net. Recent research suggests new immigrants are more depressed,” said Nichols.

“This depression happens for a variety of reasons. Newcomers are separated from family and friends, which would be their natural social safety net, so they feel a heightened sense of isolation and loneliness and lack of belonging – a collection of conditions that are considered a social determinan­t of health. In urban areas, it is much easier to find these communitie­s, these places to belong, given critical mass. Not so in rural Nova Scotia.”

Nichols said in speaking with Lavinus Numfor, a health promotion specialist for mental health and addictions at Nova Scotia Health as well as Zavala Nunez, who are the groups’ facilitato­rs, “it became clear that there was a deep need in the Tri-County region to build this community. Nova Scotia Health and YReach, along with the support of the Mental Health Foundation, are terrific supporters of this wonderful initiative.”

The peer support group offers an opportunit­y for newcomers to connect, support each other, share stories, discuss strategies for solving problems and reflect on their experience­s.

Numfor, who lives and works in Yarmouth and is himself am immigrant to Canada, said there’s absolutely a need for such a support group in the Yarmouth area. The first meeting attracted 30 participan­ts.

“When we met the first day we had people from Morrocco, Mexico, Colombia, Africa, Nigeria, Vietnam, Hong Kong – all these cultures coming into one room,” he said.

Internatio­nal students attending the Dalhousie School of Nursing or the NSCC as well as health-care providers, including physicians and nursing families, are among the immigrants calling Yarmouth home, said Numfor.

Housing, employment, transporta­tion, children not being able to make friends at school are among the issues the group has discussed, said Numfor.

“When we come together as group, we help others who have had similar experience­s,” he said. “It makes them not feel isolated. I can relate to issues, stories of the newcomers. It’s a mirror image of what I went through myself.”

Numfor said the group will be inviting special guests to attend meetings to help inform newcomers on issues that are being brought forward.

For example, someone coming from Africa or Asia or the Americas may be used to applying for jobs differentl­y from the Canadian system, which could be the reason they are having difficulty finding employment, so the group will bring in people from Nova Scotia Works to show them how to write a resumé and other job-hunting skills.

While the pilot project is scheduled to run until June, Numfor said there are plans to continue in some capacity beyond that to help newcomers feel welcome and supported.

For more informatio­n, contact Numfor at livinus. numfor@nshealth.ca or Zaval Nunez at elizabeth.zavalanune­z@halifax.ymca.ca.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The Newcomers Peer Support Group that has been launched in Yarmouth offers an opportunit­y for newcomers to connect, support each other, share stories, discuss strategies for solving problems and reflect on their experience­s. The group meets every second Thursday at the NSCC Burridge Campus. The next meeting is Feb. 15. From left to right, Rev Pastor Jomon Vincent, his wife Tessy Thomas and son Jeffrey Joe Vincent; Lucy Mugo and her daughter Joyclaire; Elizabeth Zavala Nunez and Anthony Francis. Back row: Shakir Ansari, Joseph Thobiyas, his wife Cinu Maria and daughter Mariyam Joseph Abigail (front with blue sweater).
CONTRIBUTE­D The Newcomers Peer Support Group that has been launched in Yarmouth offers an opportunit­y for newcomers to connect, support each other, share stories, discuss strategies for solving problems and reflect on their experience­s. The group meets every second Thursday at the NSCC Burridge Campus. The next meeting is Feb. 15. From left to right, Rev Pastor Jomon Vincent, his wife Tessy Thomas and son Jeffrey Joe Vincent; Lucy Mugo and her daughter Joyclaire; Elizabeth Zavala Nunez and Anthony Francis. Back row: Shakir Ansari, Joseph Thobiyas, his wife Cinu Maria and daughter Mariyam Joseph Abigail (front with blue sweater).

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