Shahram Sana Z, Bottorff Joan L, Oelke Nelly D, Dahlgren Leanne, Thomas Victoria, Spittal Patricia M
Faculty of Health and Social Development, University of British Columbia, 1147 Research Road, Kelowna, BC, V1V 1V7, Canada.
Present Address: Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Centre for Addictions Research of British Columbia, University of Victoria, PO Box 1700, STN CSC Victoria, Victoria, BC, V8W 2Y2, Canada.
BMC Womens Health. 2017 Sep 15;17(1):84. doi: 10.1186/s12905-017-0437-4.
Indigenous women in Canada have been hyper-visible in research, policy and intervention related to substance use during pregnancy; however, little is known about how the social determinants of health and substance use prior to, during, and after pregnancy intersect. The objectives of this study were to describe the social contexts of pregnant-involved young Indigenous women who use substances and to explore if an Indigenous-Specific Determinants of Health Model can predict substance use among this population.
Using descriptive statistics and hierarchical logistic regression guided by mediation analysis, the social contexts of pregnant-involved young Indigenous women who use illicit drugs' lives were explored and the Integrated Life Course and Social Determinants Model of Aboriginal Health's ability to predict heavy versus light substance use in this group was tested (N = 291).
Important distal determinants of substance use were identified including residential school histories, as well as protective factors, such as sex abuse reporting and empirical evidence for including Indigenous-specific determinants of health as important considerations in understanding young Indigenous women's experiences with pregnancy and substance use was provided.
This analysis provided important insight into the social contexts of women who have experiences with pregnancy as well as drug and/or alcohol use and highlighted the need to include Indigenous-specific determinants of health when examining young Indigenous women's social, political and historical contexts in relation to their experiences with pregnancy and substance use.
在加拿大,原住民女性在与孕期物质使用相关的研究、政策和干预措施中备受关注;然而,对于孕期前后及孕期健康的社会决定因素与物质使用如何相互交织,我们却知之甚少。本研究的目的是描述使用物质的涉孕年轻原住民女性的社会背景,并探讨特定于原住民的健康决定因素模型是否能够预测该人群中的物质使用情况。
运用描述性统计和以中介分析为指导的分层逻辑回归,对涉孕且使用非法药物的年轻原住民女性的社会背景进行了探究,并测试了原住民健康的综合生命历程与社会决定因素模型预测该群体中重度与轻度物质使用的能力(N = 291)。
确定了物质使用的重要远端决定因素,包括寄宿学校经历,以及保护因素,如性虐待报告,并为将特定于原住民的健康决定因素作为理解年轻原住民女性怀孕和物质使用经历的重要考量提供了实证依据。
该分析为有怀孕以及药物和/或酒精使用经历的女性的社会背景提供了重要见解,并强调在研究年轻原住民女性与怀孕和物质使用经历相关的社会、政治和历史背景时,需要纳入特定于原住民的健康决定因素。