Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing, 525 N. Wolfe Street Room N530M, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Center for American Indian Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Prev Sci. 2022 Oct;23(7):1287-1298. doi: 10.1007/s11121-022-01373-5. Epub 2022 Jun 1.
Reservation-based Native American youth are at disproportionate risk for high-risk substance use. The culture-as-treatment hypothesis suggests aspects of tribal culture can support prevention and healing in this context; however, the protective role of communal mastery and tribal identity have yet to be fully explored. The objectives of this study were to investigate (1) the relationship between cultural factors and high-risk substance use, which includes polysubstance use, early initiation of alcohol and illicit drugs, and binge drinking, and (2) substance use frequency and prevalence of various substances via cross-sectional design. Multiple logistic regression modeling was used to analyze data from 288 tribal members (15-24 years of age) residing on/near the Fort Peck Reservation in the Northern Plains. When controlling for childhood trauma and school attendance, having at least a high school education (OR = 0.434, p = 0.028), increased communal mastery (OR = 0.931, p = 0.007), and higher levels of tribal identity (OR = 0.579, p = 0.009) were significantly associated with lower odds of polysubstance use. Overall prevalence of polysubstance use was 50%, and binge drinking had the highest single substance prevalence (66%). Prevalence of early initiation of substances (≤ 14 years) was inhalants (70%), alcohol (61%), marijuana (74%), methamphetamine (23%), and prescription drug misuse (23%). Hydrocodone, an opioid, was the most frequently misused prescription drug. Findings indicate programs focused on promoting education engagement, communal mastery, and tribal identity may mitigate substance use for Native American adolescents living in high-risk, reservation-based settings.
基于保留地的美国原住民青年有不成比例的高风险物质使用风险。文化即治疗假说表明,部落文化的某些方面可以在这种情况下支持预防和治疗;然而,社区掌握和部落身份的保护作用尚未得到充分探索。本研究的目的是调查:(1)文化因素与高风险物质使用之间的关系,包括多物质使用、酒精和非法药物的早期使用以及狂饮,以及(2)通过横断面设计研究物质使用频率和各种物质的流行率。多因素逻辑回归模型用于分析居住在北平原福特佩克保留地/附近的 288 名部落成员(15-24 岁)的数据。在控制儿童期创伤和学校出勤率的情况下,至少接受过高中教育(OR=0.434,p=0.028)、社区掌握程度提高(OR=0.931,p=0.007)和部落身份水平较高(OR=0.579,p=0.009)与多物质使用的可能性降低显著相关。多物质使用的总体流行率为 50%,狂饮的单一物质流行率最高(66%)。物质早期使用(≤14 岁)的流行率为吸入剂(70%)、酒精(61%)、大麻(74%)、冰毒(23%)和处方药物滥用(23%)。阿片类药物氢可酮是最常被滥用的处方药物。研究结果表明,专注于促进教育参与、社区掌握和部落身份的计划可能会减轻生活在高风险保留地环境中的美国原住民青少年的物质使用。