Centers for American Indian and Alaska Native Health, Colorado School of Public Health, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, 13055 East 17th Avenue, Aurora, CO, 80045, USA,
J Youth Adolesc. 2014 Mar;43(3):437-53. doi: 10.1007/s10964-013-0026-2. Epub 2013 Oct 18.
Substance use often begins earlier among American Indians compared to the rest of the United States, a troubling reality that puts Native youth at risk for escalating and problematic use. We need to understand more fully patterns of emergent substance use among young American Indian adolescents, risk factors associated with escalating use trajectories, and protective factors that can be parlayed into robust prevention strategies. We used growth mixture modeling with longitudinal data from middle-school students on a Northern Plains reservation (Wave 1 N = 381, M age at baseline = 12.77, 45.6% female) to identify subgroups exhibiting different trajectories of cigarette, alcohol, and marijuana use. We explored how both risk (e.g., exposure to stressful events, deviant peers) and protective (e.g., positive parent-child relationships, cultural identity) factors were related to these trajectories. For all substances, most youth showed trajectories characterized by low rates of substance use (nonuser classes), but many also showed patterns characterized by high and/or escalating use. Across substances, exposure to stress, early puberty, and deviant peer relationships were associated with the more problematic patterns, while strong relationships with parents and prosocial peers were associated with nonuser classes. Our measures of emergent cultural identity were generally unrelated to substance use trajectory classes among these young adolescents. The findings point to the importance of early substance use prevention programs for American Indian youth that attenuate the impact of exposure to stressful events, redirect peer relationships, and foster positive parent influences. They also point to the need to explore more fully how cultural influences can be captured.
与美国其他地区相比,美洲印第安人的物质使用通常更早开始,这是一个令人不安的现实,使美国原住民青年面临不断升级和出现问题的使用风险。我们需要更全面地了解年轻美国印第安青少年新兴物质使用模式、与使用轨迹升级相关的风险因素以及可转化为强大预防策略的保护因素。我们使用来自北普拉特保留地中学阶段学生的纵向数据(第 1 波 N = 381,基线时的平均年龄为 12.77 岁,45.6%为女性),使用增长混合物建模来确定显示不同香烟、酒精和大麻使用轨迹的亚组。我们探讨了风险(例如,暴露于压力事件、偏差同伴)和保护因素(例如,积极的亲子关系、文化认同)如何与这些轨迹相关。对于所有物质,大多数年轻人表现出低物质使用率(非使用者类别)的轨迹,但也有很多人表现出高和/或不断升级的使用模式。在所有物质中,暴露于压力、青春期提前和偏差同伴关系与更成问题的模式相关,而与父母和亲社会同伴的牢固关系与非使用者类别相关。在这些青少年中,我们对新兴文化认同的衡量标准与物质使用轨迹类别通常没有关系。这些发现表明,对于美国印第安青年来说,早期物质使用预防计划非常重要,这些计划可以减轻接触压力事件、重新引导同伴关系和促进积极的父母影响的影响。它们还表明需要更全面地探讨如何捕捉文化影响。