Tulane University School of Social Work, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.
Tulane University School of Public Health, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.
Fam Process. 2024 Mar;63(1):97-112. doi: 10.1111/famp.12854. Epub 2023 Jan 29.
Parenting quality, family resilience, and community resilience and support have been found to be primary protective factors for the disproportionate burden of anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), substance use disorder (SUD), depression, and suicide that US Indigenous youth and adults tend to experience. The purpose of this research study was to examine pilot results for outcomes related to relational factors for Indigenous family members who participated in the Weaving Healthy Families (WHF) program (translated to Chukka Auchaffi' Natana, in the Choctaw tribal language), a culturally grounded and empirically informed program geared toward promoting wellness, family resilience, parenting practices, and community resilience while also preventing SUD and violence. This nonrandomized pre-experimental pilot intervention followed a longitudinal design, which included pre-test, a post-test, and a 6-, 9-, and 12-month post-intervention follow-up surveys. Repeated-measures regressions were utilized with generalized estimating equations (GEE) to examine changes in parenting, family resilience, and communal mastery before and after the intervention for 24 adults and adolescents (12-17) across eight tribal families. Results indicate that the overall quality of parenting improved, as measured by improved parental monitoring and reductions in inconsistent discipline and corporal punishment. We identified sex differences in positive parenting, poor monitoring, and corporal punishment, with greater decreases in these measures among males over time. Family resilience and communal mastery improved for adolescent and adult participants after the WHF program. Our results indicate promising improvements across relational, familial, and community ecological, which provide clear clinical implications.
养育质量、家庭韧性、社区韧性和支持被发现是美国原住民青年和成年人过度承受焦虑、创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)、物质使用障碍(SUD)、抑郁和自杀负担的主要保护因素。本研究旨在检查参与“编织健康家庭”(WHF)计划(用乔克托部落语言中的 Chukka Auchaffi' Natana 翻译)的原住民家庭成员的关系因素相关结果的试点结果,该计划是一个文化基础和经验丰富的计划,旨在促进健康、家庭韧性、育儿实践和社区韧性,同时预防 SUD 和暴力。这种非随机预实验性试点干预遵循纵向设计,包括前测、后测以及干预后 6、9 和 12 个月的随访调查。使用广义估计方程(GEE)对重复测量回归进行分析,以检查 8 个部落家庭中的 24 名青少年和成年人(12-17 岁)在干预前后的育儿、家庭韧性和社区掌握能力的变化。结果表明,育儿质量总体上有所提高,这体现在父母监督的改善以及不一致的纪律处分和体罚的减少。我们发现积极育儿、不良监测和体罚方面存在性别差异,随着时间的推移,男性在这些方面的下降幅度更大。WHF 计划后,青少年和成年参与者的家庭韧性和社区掌握能力有所提高。我们的结果表明,关系、家庭和社区生态系统都有了有希望的改善,这为临床实践提供了明确的指导意义。