Cheney Ann M, Curran Geoffrey M, Booth Brenda M, Sullivan Steve, Stewart Katharine, Borders Tyrone F
J Drug Issues. 2014 Jan;44(1):94-113. doi: 10.1177/0022042613491108.
This study qualitatively examines the religious and spiritual dimensions of cutting down and stopping cocaine use among African Americans in rural and urban areas of Arkansas. The analyses compare and contrast the narrative data of 28 current cocaine users living in communities where the Black church plays a fundamental role in the social and cultural lives of many African Americans, highlighting the ways that participants used religious symbols, idiomatic expression, and Biblical scriptures to interpret and make sense of their substance-use experiences. Participants drew on diverse religious and spiritual beliefs and practices, including participation in organized religion, reliance on a personal relationship with God, and God's will to cut down and stop cocaine use. Our findings suggest that culturally sensitive interventions addressing the influence of religion and spirituality in substance use are needed to reduce cocaine use and promote recovery in this at-risk, minority population.
本研究对阿肯色州城乡非裔美国人减少和停止使用可卡因的宗教及精神层面进行了定性考察。分析比较并对比了28名当前可卡因使用者的叙事数据,这些使用者所在社区中黑人教会在许多非裔美国人的社会和文化生活中发挥着重要作用,着重突出了参与者运用宗教符号、习语表达和圣经经文来阐释其药物使用经历并使其具有意义的方式。参与者借鉴了多样的宗教和精神信仰及实践,包括参与有组织的宗教活动、依赖与上帝的个人关系以及依靠上帝的意志来减少和停止使用可卡因。我们的研究结果表明,需要采取考虑文化敏感性的干预措施来应对宗教和精神层面在药物使用方面的影响,以减少可卡因使用并促进这一高危少数群体的康复。