Traditional practices, traditional spirituality, and alcohol cessation among American Indians.

Rosalie A Torres Stone, Les B Whitbeck, Xiaojin Chen, Kurt Johnson, Debbie M Olson
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引用次数: 169

Abstract

Objective: The detrimental effects of alcohol misuse and dependence are well documented as an important public-health issue among American Indian adults. This preponderance of problem-centered research, however, has eclipsed some important resilience factors associated with life course patterns of American Indian alcohol use. In this study, we investigate the influence of enculturation, and each of the three component dimensions (traditional practices, traditional spirituality, and cultural identity) to provide a stringent evaluation of the specific mechanisms through which traditional culture affects alcohol cessation among American Indians.

Method: These data were collected as part of a 3-year lagged sequential study currently underway on four American Indian reservations in the upper Midwest and five Canadian First Nation reserves. The sample consisted of 980 Native American adults, with 71% women and 29% men who are parents or guardians of youth ages 10-12 years old. Logistic regression was used to assess the unique contribution of the indicators of alcohol cessation. Excluding adults who had no lifetime alcohol use, the total sample size for present analysis is 732 adult respondents.

Results: The findings show that older adults, women, and married adults were more likely to have quit using alcohol. When we examined the individual components of enculturation, two of the three components (participation in traditional activities and traditional spirituality) had significantly positive effects on alcohol cessation.

Conclusions: Although our findings provide empirical evidence that traditional practices and traditional spirituality play an important role in alcohol cessation, the data are cross-sectional and therefore do not indicate direction of effects. Longitudinal studies are warranted, in light of the work that concludes that cultural/spiritual issues may be more important in maintaining sobriety once it is established rather than initiating it.

美国印第安人的传统习俗、传统灵性和戒酒。
目的:酒精滥用和依赖的有害影响是美国印第安成年人中一个重要的公共卫生问题。然而,这种以问题为中心的研究的优势,掩盖了与美国印第安人饮酒的生命历程模式相关的一些重要的恢复力因素。在这项研究中,我们调查了文化适应的影响,以及三个组成维度(传统习俗、传统灵性和文化认同)中的每一个,以提供传统文化影响美洲印第安人戒酒的具体机制的严格评估。方法:这些数据是作为一项为期3年的滞后顺序研究的一部分收集的,该研究目前正在中西部北部的四个美国印第安人保留地和五个加拿大第一民族保留地进行。该样本由980名美国原住民成年人组成,其中71%的女性和29%的男性是10-12岁青少年的父母或监护人。使用逻辑回归来评估戒酒指标的独特贡献。排除终身不饮酒的成年人,本分析的总样本量为732名成年受访者。结果:研究结果表明,老年人、女性和已婚人士戒酒的可能性更大。当我们检查文化适应的各个组成部分时,三个组成部分中的两个(参与传统活动和传统灵性)对戒酒有显著的积极影响。结论:尽管我们的研究结果提供了经验证据,表明传统习俗和传统精神在戒酒中起着重要作用,但这些数据是横断面的,因此不能表明效果的方向。纵向研究是有必要的,因为这项工作得出结论,文化/精神问题在保持清醒方面可能更重要,一旦它建立起来,而不是开始它。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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