Brave Heart Maria Yellow Horse, Chase Josephine, Elkins Jennifer, Martin Jennifer, Nanez Jennifer, Mootz Jennifer
Am Indian Alsk Native Ment Health Res. 2016;23(3):24-47. doi: 10.5820/aian.2303.2016.24.
Although there is literature concentrating on cross-cultural approaches to academic and community partnerships with Native communities, few address the process and experiences of American Indian women leading federally funded and culturally grounded behavioral health intervention research in Native communities. This paper summarizes relevant literature on community-engaged research with Native communities, examines traditional roles and modern challenges for American Indian women, describes the culturally grounded collaborative process for the authors' behavioral health intervention development with Native communities, and considers emergent themes from our own research experiences navigating competing demands from mainstream and Native communities. It concludes with recommendations for supporting and enhancing resilience.
尽管有文献聚焦于与原住民社区建立学术和社区伙伴关系的跨文化方法,但很少有文献涉及美国印第安女性在原住民社区主导由联邦资助且基于文化的行为健康干预研究的过程和经历。本文总结了与原住民社区开展社区参与式研究的相关文献,审视了美国印第安女性的传统角色和现代挑战,描述了作者与原住民社区开展行为健康干预开发的基于文化的协作过程,并思考了我们在应对来自主流社区和原住民社区相互竞争的需求的研究经历中出现的主题。文章最后提出了支持和增强复原力的建议。