Department of Anthropology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA; email:
Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Annu Rev Clin Psychol. 2023 May 9;19:23-49. doi: 10.1146/annurev-clinpsy-080921-072950. Epub 2023 Jan 9.
This review updates and extends Gone & Trimble's (2012) prior review of American Indian (AI) and Alaska Native (AN) mental health. First, it defines AI/AN populations in the USA, with an explanation of the importance of political citizenship in semisovereign Tribal Nations as primary for categorizing this population. Second, it presents an updated summary of what is known about AI/AN mental health, with careful notation of recurrent findings concerning community inequities in addiction, trauma, and suicide. Third, this article reviews key literature about AI/AN community mental health services appearing since 2010, including six randomized controlled trials of recognizable mental health treatments. Finally, it reimagines the AI/AN mental health enterprise in response to an "alter-Native psy-ence," which recasts prevalent mental health conditions as postcolonial pathologies and harnesses postcolonial meaning-making through Indigenized therapeutic interventions. Ultimately, AI/AN Tribal Nations must determine for themselves how to adopt, adapt, integrate, or refuse specific mental health treatments and services for wider community benefit.
本综述更新并扩展了 Gone 和 Trimble(2012 年)之前对美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民心理健康的综述。首先,它定义了美国的美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民人口,并解释了政治公民身份在半主权部落国家中的重要性,这是对这一人群进行分类的主要因素。其次,它总结了关于美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民心理健康的最新知识,特别注意到有关成瘾、创伤和自杀方面社区不平等的反复出现的发现。第三,本文综述了自 2010 年以来出现的关于美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民社区心理健康服务的重要文献,包括六项针对可识别心理健康治疗的随机对照试验。最后,它重新构想了美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民心理健康事业,以应对“替代精神科学”,后者将普遍存在的心理健康状况重新定义为后殖民病理学,并通过本土化治疗干预来利用后殖民意义的构建。最终,美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民部落国家必须自行决定如何为更广泛的社区利益采用、适应、整合或拒绝特定的心理健康治疗和服务。