Mayeda David T, Hishinuma Earl S, Nishimura Stephanie T, Garcia-Santiago Orlando, Mark Gregory Y
Asian/Pacific Islander Youth Violence Prevention Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Hawai'i, Honolulu, Hawaii, 96814, USA.
J Adolesc Health. 2006 Aug;39(2):276.e1-11. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2005.12.006.
This study investigates the prevalence rates of violent and deviant behaviors among a sample of Filipino, Hawaiian, Japanese, and Samoan public high school students residing in Hawai'i, and is the first relatively large-scale study of its kind regarding a disaggregated sample of Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) youth. Filipino, Hawaiian, and Samoan adolescents were the chosen ethnic groups for this study's focus due to their over-representation in Hawai'i's juvenile justice system.
Data for this study were gathered collaboratively by researchers, community groups, and school officials who agreed that youth violence was a community concern worthy of deeper understanding and community response. The study's process included three phases: a focus group consultation phase, field-testing, and the final risk and protective factor study. For the final study, 326 randomly selected students representing three Hawai'i public high schools were surveyed on a one-on-one basis.A smaller sample of Japanese students was also included in the study, serving as a control group.
Findings illustrate the importance of disaggregating specific ethnic and gender groups within the AAPI ethnic category when examining adolescent issues. As examples, Samoan youth reported significantly higher rates of violence than other ethnic groups surveyed, and Hawaiian girls reported higher rates of substance use than Hawaiian boys, which was not commensurate with other ethnic groups. Filipino, Hawaiian, and Samoan youth all reported significantly higher rates than Japanese on overall deviant behavior.
Implications for further research and community development include enhancing minority youths' bicultural self-efficacy.
本研究调查了居住在夏威夷的菲律宾、夏威夷、日本和萨摩亚公立高中生样本中的暴力和越轨行为发生率,这是同类研究中首次针对亚裔美国人和太平洋岛民(AAPI)青年的细分样本进行的相对大规模研究。由于菲律宾、夏威夷和萨摩亚青少年在夏威夷少年司法系统中的占比过高,因此被选为该研究重点关注的族裔群体。
本研究的数据由研究人员、社区团体和学校官员合作收集,他们一致认为青少年暴力是一个值得深入了解和社区回应的社区问题。该研究过程包括三个阶段:焦点小组咨询阶段、实地测试和最终的风险与保护因素研究。在最终研究中,对代表三所夏威夷公立高中的326名随机抽取的学生进行了一对一调查。研究中还纳入了一小部分日本学生作为对照组。
研究结果表明,在研究青少年问题时,细分AAPI族裔类别中的特定族裔和性别群体非常重要。例如,萨摩亚青年报告的暴力发生率显著高于其他被调查的族裔群体,夏威夷女孩报告的物质使用率高于夏威夷男孩,这与其他族裔群体不同。菲律宾、夏威夷和萨摩亚青年在总体越轨行为方面的报告率均显著高于日本青年。
对进一步研究和社区发展的启示包括提高少数族裔青年的双文化自我效能感。