Developing an Indigenous Measure of Overall Health and Well-being: The Wicozani Instrument.

IF 1.9 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Heather J. Peters, Teresa R. Peterson
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

A Native community developed the Wicozani Instrument, a 9-item self-report measure, to assess overall health and well-being from an Indigenous epistemology. The Wicozani Instrument measures mental, physical, and spiritual health and their importance to an individual's quality of life. The instrument's validity and reliability was examined through two studies. Study 1 utilized standardized measures from Native (i.e., Awareness of Connectedness Scale) and Western (i.e., Psychological Sense of School Membership and Suicide Ideation Questionnaire) epistemologies with Native and non-Native youth. Study 2 utilized a community created measure (i.e., Indigenous Healing Strategies Scale) with Dakota women. Results suggest the Wicozani Instrument is valid and reliable. The development of an Indigenous measure of overall health and well-being addresses Western atomistic frameworks, which often perpetuate the perception of Native identity as a risk factor for poor health, and works to disrupt the Cycle of Native Health Disparities.
发展整体健康和福祉的土著措施:Wicozani工具。
一个土著社区开发了Wicozani工具,一个包含9个项目的自我报告测量,从土著认识论来评估整体健康和福祉。Wicozani仪器测量心理、身体和精神健康,以及它们对个人生活质量的重要性。通过两项研究验证了该仪器的效度和信度。研究1使用了土著和非土著青年的标准化测量方法(即连通性意识量表)和西方(即学校成员心理感和自杀意念问卷)认识论。研究2对达科他妇女使用了社区创建的测量方法(即土著治疗策略量表)。结果表明,Wicozani仪器是有效可靠的。土著总体健康和福祉衡量标准的制定解决了西方原子论框架的问题,这种框架往往使土著身份认同成为健康状况不差的一个风险因素,并破坏了土著健康差距的循环。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
30.80%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research: The Journal of the National Center is a professionally refereed scientific journal. It contains empirical research, program evaluations, case studies, unpublished dissertations, and other articles in the behavioral, social, and health sciences which clearly relate to the mental health status of American Indians and Alaska Natives. All topical areas relating to this field are addressed, such as psychology, psychiatry, nursing, sociology, anthropology, social work, and specific areas of education, medicine, history, and law. Through a standardized format (American Psychological Association guidelines) new data regarding this special population is easier to retrieve, compare, and evaluate.
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