Helm Susana, Hishinuma Earl, Okamoto Scott, Chin Steven Keone, Silva Anjelica
Department of Psychiatry, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa.
School of Social Work, Hawai'i Pacific University, and an Adjunct Professor, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa.
Asian Am J Psychol. 2019 Sep;10(3):206-217. doi: 10.1037/aap0000157.
The way in which behavioral health interventions are designed, implemented, and evaluated must be responsive to the ethnocultural characteristics of the targeted youth and their families, schools, and communities. The goal of this paper is to examine the relationship between ethnocultural identity measures and substance use among Native Hawaiian compared to non-Hawaiian youth. A cross-sectional analysis was conducted from baseline data drawn from an efficacy trial of a culturally-grounded drug prevention curriculum, Hoòuna Pono. The sample (N=486) included youth from 13 rural, public middle schools who identified as Native Hawaiian, as well as other Pacific Islander, Asian, and other ethnicities. Ethnocultural identity measures used to explore the relationship between 30-day substance use included items from the Hawaiian Culture Scale (Hishinuma et al., 2000) and from Phinney's (1992) Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure. Among the total sample, prevalence rates indicated that 11.2% of participants reported having been offered substances, and 9.7% reported having used one or more substances in the past month. For Hawaiian youth relative to the non-Hawaiian group, higher levels of Native Hawaiian ethnocultural independent variables were moderately associated with fewer offers to use substances and less gateway drug use. Other results were mixed regarding the relationship between ethnocultural variables and substance use. The present study found that selected ethnocultural variables were moderately associated with fewer drug offers and lower levels of gateway drug use for Hawaiian versus non-Hawaiian youth.
行为健康干预措施的设计、实施和评估方式必须适应目标青少年及其家庭、学校和社区的种族文化特征。本文的目的是研究与非夏威夷青少年相比,夏威夷原住民的种族文化认同测量与物质使用之间的关系。我们从一项基于文化的药物预防课程Hoòuna Pono疗效试验的基线数据进行了横断面分析。样本(N = 486)包括来自13所农村公立中学的青少年,他们自认为是夏威夷原住民,以及其他太平洋岛民、亚洲人和其他种族。用于探索30天物质使用之间关系的种族文化认同测量包括来自夏威夷文化量表(Hishinuma等人,2000年)和菲尼(1992年)的多群体种族认同测量中的项目。在总样本中,患病率表明11.2%的参与者报告有人向他们提供过物质,9.7%的参与者报告在过去一个月使用过一种或多种物质。相对于非夏威夷群体,夏威夷青少年中,较高水平的夏威夷原住民种族文化自变量与较少的物质使用提供和较少的入门药物使用适度相关。关于种族文化变量与物质使用之间的关系,其他结果则好坏参半。本研究发现,对于夏威夷青少年与非夏威夷青少年而言,所选的种族文化变量与较少的药物提供和较低水平的入门药物使用适度相关。