Spicer Paul, Beals Janette, Croy Calvin D, Mitchell Christina M, Novins Douglas K, Moore Laurie, Manson Spero M
American Indian and Alaska Native Programs, Univesity of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Aurora, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2003 Nov;27(11):1785-97. doi: 10.1097/01.ALC.0000095864.45755.53.
Evidence suggests that American Indian (AI) populations may be at increased risk for problems with alcohol, but a lack of community-based research using diagnostic criteria has constrained our ability to draw inferences about the extent of severe alcohol problems, such as dependence, in AI populations.
This article draws on data collected by the American Indian Service Utilization, Psychiatric Epidemiology, Risk and Protective Factors Project (AI-SUPERPFP), which involved interviews with 3084 AI people living on or near their reservations. The AI-SUPERPFP sample was drawn from two culturally distinct tribes, which were designated with geographical descriptions: Northern Plains (NP) and Southwest (SW). Comparisons with data collected by the National Comorbidity Survey (NCS) were explored by using shared measures to situate the findings from AI-SUPERPFP in a national context.
Lifetime rates of DSM-III-R alcohol dependence for men in both AI-SUPERPFP samples were 50% higher than those found in the NCS. Rates of lifetime alcohol dependence for women varied by sample, however; NP women had twice the rate of women in the NCS, but SW women had rates quite similar to those of NCS women. Patterns for 12-month alcohol dependence in AI-SUPERPFP were generally more similar to those found in NCS.
The rates of DSM-III-R alcohol dependence found in AI-SUPERPFP were generally higher than US averages and justify continued attention and concern to alcohol problems in AI communities, but they are not nearly as high as those in other reports in the literature that rely on less stringent sampling methods. Furthermore, significant sociocultural influences on the correlates of alcohol dependence in AI communities are evident in these data, underscoring the need to appreciate the complex and varying influences on the patterning of alcohol problems in the diverse cultural contexts of the US.
有证据表明,美国印第安人(AI)群体可能面临更高的酒精相关问题风险,但缺乏基于社区的使用诊断标准的研究,限制了我们推断AI群体中严重酒精问题(如依赖)程度的能力。
本文利用美国印第安人服务利用、精神疾病流行病学、风险与保护因素项目(AI-SUPERPFP)收集的数据,该项目涉及对生活在其保留地或附近的3084名AI人群进行访谈。AI-SUPERPFP样本来自两个文化上不同的部落,分别用地理描述命名:北部平原(NP)和西南部(SW)。通过使用共享指标,将AI-SUPERPFP的研究结果与全国共病调查(NCS)收集的数据进行比较,以便将其置于全国背景下。
两个AI-SUPERPFP样本中男性的DSM-III-R酒精依赖终生患病率均比NCS中的患病率高50%。然而,女性的终生酒精依赖患病率因样本而异;NP部落的女性患病率是NCS中女性患病率的两倍,但SW部落的女性患病率与NCS中的女性患病率相当。AI-SUPERPFP中12个月酒精依赖的模式通常与NCS中发现的模式更为相似。
AI-SUPERPFP中发现的DSM-III-R酒精依赖率总体上高于美国平均水平,这表明需要继续关注AI社区中的酒精问题,但这些比率远低于文献中其他采用不太严格抽样方法的报告中的比率。此外,这些数据表明社会文化对AI社区中酒精依赖相关因素有显著影响,这凸显了在美国多元文化背景下认识酒精问题模式所受复杂多样影响的必要性。