Craig Rushing Stephanie, Stephens David
Northwest Portland Indian Health Board, Portland, OR 97201, USA.
Am Indian Alsk Native Ment Health Res. 2012;19(1):76-101. doi: 10.5820/aian.1901.2012.76.
Media technologies, including the Internet, cell phones, and video games, offer new avenues to reach Native youth on sensitive health topics. Project Red Talon, a sexually transmitted disease (STD)/HIV prevention project that serves the 43 federally recognized tribes in Oregon, Washington, and Idaho, used community-based participatory research methods in partnership with the Northwest tribes to review existing technology-based interventions and generate recommendations for designing interventions that reflect the culture, needs, and organizational capacities of participating tribes and Native youth. These findings are now being used to guide the development of technology-based health interventions targeting American Indian/Alaska Native teens and young adults.
包括互联网、手机和电子游戏在内的媒体技术,为就敏感健康话题接触原住民青年提供了新途径。“红色爪子计划”是一项性传播疾病/艾滋病毒预防项目,服务于俄勒冈州、华盛顿州和爱达荷州的43个获得联邦承认的部落。该项目与西北部落合作,采用基于社区的参与性研究方法,审查现有的基于技术的干预措施,并为设计反映参与部落和原住民青年的文化、需求及组织能力的干预措施提出建议。这些研究结果现正被用于指导针对美国印第安/阿拉斯加原住民青少年和年轻人的基于技术的健康干预措施的开发。