多元文化预防干预在美国西南部城市印第安青年中的效果

The Journal of Primary Prevention Pub Date : 2007-11-01 Epub Date: 2007-12-06 DOI:10.1007/s10935-007-0114-8
Andrea L Dixon, Scott T Yabiku, Scott K Okamoto, Sheila S Tann, Flavio F Marsiglia, Stephen Kulis, Aimee M Burke
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摘要

本研究探讨了非目标群体的少数民族青年如何可能或可能不会受益于以其他文化群体为重点的预防干预。该研究特别评估了以证据为基础的毒品预防课程的效果,以美国西南部城市的美国印第安青年为样本,其中大多数人自我报告为多民族遗产。本研究采用生长曲线模型,考察了这些青少年的药物使用发展轨迹,并在干预前、干预后和两个随访时期将其与其他种族/民族青少年的轨迹进行了比较。结果表明,所有青少年的酒精和大麻使用量都比干预前有所增加。在某些措施上,治疗组中美国印第安青年的吸毒情况有所增加。具体来说,与其他种族/民族身份的治疗组相比,他们报告了酒精和大麻使用量和频率的陡峭轨迹。本文讨论了这些发现对多民族城市美国印第安青年的文化基础预防计划的发展的影响。编辑的战略意义:这项研究提供了一个具体的例子,但也提出了一个强有力的全球论点,即需要制定和评估以目标群体的世界观为文化基础的预防方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The efficacy of a multicultural prevention intervention among urban American Indian youth in the southwest U.S.

This study explored how a non-targeted group of ethnic minority youth might or might not benefit from a prevention intervention focused on other cultural groups. The study specifically evaluated the effects of an evidence-based drug prevention curriculum with a sample of urban American Indian youth in the southwest U.S., most of whom self-reported multi-ethnic heritages. Using growth curve modeling, this research examined the developmental trajectory of drug use for these youth, and compared it with the trajectory of youth from other racial/ethnic groups at pre-intervention, post-intervention, and two follow up time periods. Results indicate that alcohol and marijuana use increased from pre-intervention across subsequent time periods for all youth. The drug use of the American Indian youth in the treatment group increased on some measures. Specifically, they reported a steeper trajectory in the amount and frequency of alcohol and marijuana use compared to the youths in the treatment groups with other racial/ethnic identifications. The implications of these findings for the development of culturally grounded prevention programs for multi-ethnic, urban American Indian youth are discussed. EDITORS' STRATEGIC IMPLICATIONS: This research provides a specific example, but also makes a strong global argument, for the need to develop and evaluate prevention programs that are culturally grounded in the worldview of the target group.

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