McKinley Catherine E, Lilly Jennifer, Liddell Jessica L, Knipp Hannah, Solomon Tamela Autumn, Comby Nikki, Comby Harold, Haynes Patricia, Ferris Kathleen, Goldberg Maple
Tulane University School of Social Work, New Orleans, LA, USA.
Fordham University, New York, NY, USA.
Fam Soc. 2023 Sep;104(3):245-261. doi: 10.1177/10443894221146351. Epub 2023 Apr 28.
Family prevention programs that enhance mental health, wellness, and resilience-while simultaneously addressing violence and alcohol and other drug (AOD) abuse-among Indigenous families are scarce. This gap in culturally grounded and community-based programs creates a critical need to develop and evaluate the efficacy of such prevention programs. This article fills this gap, with the purpose of describing the structure and content of the Weaving Healthy Families (WHF) program, a culturally grounded and community-based program aimed at preventing violence and AOD use while promoting mental health, resilience, and wellness in Indigenous families. The focus then turns to how to approach this process of developing and implementing the program in a culturally grounded and community-based way.
旨在增强原住民家庭心理健康、幸福感和恢复力,同时解决暴力以及酒精和其他药物滥用问题的家庭预防项目十分匮乏。这种基于文化且以社区为基础的项目存在的差距,迫切需要开发并评估此类预防项目的效果。本文填补了这一空白,目的是描述“编织健康家庭”(WHF)项目的结构和内容,该项目是一个基于文化且以社区为基础的项目,旨在预防暴力和药物滥用,同时促进原住民家庭的心理健康、恢复力和幸福感。接下来重点讨论如何以基于文化且以社区为基础的方式开展该项目的开发和实施过程。