Beauvais F, Oetting E R, Edwards R W
Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse. 1985;11(3-4):209-29. doi: 10.3109/00952998509016863.
Anonymous surveys on drug use were administered to 7th-12th grade students in Indian reservation schools. A large number of tribes were surveyed from 1975 through 1983. There is reason to believe the results are reasonably representative of Indian youth living on reservations. Lifetime prevalence for most drugs is higher than that for non-Indian youth throughout this period, and rates for alcohol, marijuana, and inhalants, the most frequently tried drugs, were particularly high. Since 1981 there has been a slight drop in lifetime prevalence for most drugs. Current use figures show the same trends, with increasing current use through 1981 and a drop since that time. Analysis of patterns of drug use, classifying youth according to number, type, and depth of involvement with drugs, shows a similar trend, with radical increases until 1981 and then a drop in all but one of the more serious drug use types. Despite this drop, 53% of Indian youth would still be classified as "at risk" in their drug involvement, compared with 35% of non-Indian youth. Reasons probably relate to severely detrimental conditions on reservations; unemployment, prejudice, poverty, and lack of optimism about the future.
对印第安保留地学校的7至12年级学生进行了关于药物使用的匿名调查。从1975年到1983年,对大量部落进行了调查。有理由相信,这些结果能合理地代表生活在保留地的印第安青年的情况。在此期间,大多数药物的终生患病率高于非印第安青年,而酒精、大麻和吸入剂(最常被尝试的药物)的使用率尤其高。自1981年以来,大多数药物的终生患病率略有下降。当前使用数据显示了相同的趋势,即到1981年使用率不断上升,此后有所下降。对药物使用模式的分析,根据青年与药物的接触数量、类型和深度对青年进行分类,显示出类似的趋势,即到1981年急剧上升,然后除一种较严重的药物使用类型外,其他类型均有所下降。尽管有所下降,但53%的印第安青年在药物接触方面仍会被归类为“有风险”,而非印第安青年的这一比例为35%。原因可能与保留地的严重不利状况有关;失业、偏见、贫困以及对未来缺乏乐观态度。