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Page 1: PhD Dissertation Defense Beverly Patchell, RN, MS, CNS September 27, 2011

PhD Dissertation Defense

Beverly Patchell, RN, MS, CNS

September 27, 2011

NEW MEXICO STATE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF NURSING

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Dr. Mary HokeDr. Leslie Robbins

Dr. John LoweDr. Iris Mullins

Dr. Kathleen Chinn

DISSERTATION COMMITTEE

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NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN ADOLESCENTS:

RESPONSE TO A CULTURALLY TAILORED, SCHOOL-BASED

SUBSTANCE ABUSE INTERVENTION

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SignificanceAims

MethodResults

Discussion Next Steps

OVERVIEW OF THE PRESENTATION

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Substance abuse with Native American Indian tribes in the U.S.

• number one health concern for Native American Indians (NAI)

• Substance abuse among NAI adolescents

correlates with higher incidence of associated problems

(Substance Abuse Mental Health Services Administration, 2008)

BACKGROUND

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• 2008 state statistics show the economic cost at $6 B/year

• personal cost is greater •85% of all homicides•80% of all prison incarcerations•65% of all child abuse cases•55% of all domestic assaults

• NAI are 9% of the general population, but >25% of the OK prison population.

(Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services, 2008)

OKLAHOMA PROBLEM

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• Beauvais et al. (2004) looked at patterns over the past 25 years and found substance abuse to be the primary contributor to health issues among NAI

• Clarke (2002) looked at the emotional issues related to the incidence of substance abuse

• SAHMSA and the Indian Health Service have written extensively about the health issues

LITERATURE REVIEW

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• Prevention efforts have previously focused on protective factors such as parent-teen communication, decision-making skills, use of role models, and individual coping styles (Beebee et al., 2008; Chiong, Bry, & Johnson, 2009)

• Use of Native American Indian rituals and traditions has primarily been used in inpatient or residential treatment (Novins et al., 1996; Jacobs, 2002)

• The Cherokee Self-Reliance Theory and Model has demonstrated success based on a culturally tailored approach used with Cherokee adolescents (Lowe, 2006)

LITERATURE REVIEW

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GAPS IN THE RESEARCH

• substance abuse treatment for NAI adolescents focuses on the inpatient and residential components of treatment

• education and early prevention focused on school-based education efforts, with poor to mixed results (Segal,

2003)

• there is a need for culturally adapted models and documentation of that adaptation (Domencech Rodriguiz, Baumann & Schwartz, 2011)

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• Developed through research into Cherokee culturally-protective factors as described by Cherokee people (Lowe, 2002)

• Utilized theoretical concepts to determine if strengthening the cultural components of a substance abuse prevention model would influence decisions about substance use and abuse (Lowe, 2006)

CHEROKEE SELF-RELIANCE THEORY

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CHEROKEE TALKING CIRCLE INTERVENTION

BEING RESPONSIBLE

• Substance Abuse Education • Recognition and Acknowledgement of Personal Substance Use Problems• Identification of High-Risk Situations• Relationship Building• Family Conflict Resolution• Social Support

BEING DISCIPLINED

• Self-Monitoring • Commitment Generation • Alternatives to Substance Use

BEING CONFIDENT

• Acceptance of Personal Strengths • Practicing Resistance/Refusal • Coping with Stress• Abstinence Violation Effect

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• Based on the general world view of Native American Indian people

• The natural world is inherently circular and spiral, with ordered flow and movement

• Health requires order and ill health is a result of interrupted flow and dis-order

• Fibonacci sequence is recognized by Western science as the mathematical foundation of life and creation

CIRCULAR MODEL FOR CULTURAL TAILORING

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• The tribes of the Great Plains Area encompasses many tribes and sweeps across the United States in the region between the Mississippi River and the western coastal states

• The tribes were historically rovers and hunters, nomadic and loosely organized

• Their prowess was in hunting, raiding, and war

POPULATION

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Original Inhabitants of Oklahoma Land Area

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1890’s Map of Oklahoma

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Current Map of Oklahoma

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ELDER’S TRANSFORM THE MODEL

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BEING RESPONSIBLE• Substance Abuse Education• Recognition and Acknowledgement of Personal Substance Use Problem• Identification of High-Risk Situations• Relationship Building• Family Conflict Resolution• Social Support

BEING DISCIPLINED• Self-Monitoring • Commitment Generation • Alternatives to Substance Use

BEING CONFIDENT• Acceptance of Personal Strengths• Practicing Resistance/Refusal • Coping with Stress• Abstinence Violation Effect

(Adapted with permission from the Cherokee Talking Circle, Lowe, 2006)

 

NATIVE TALKING CIRCLE INTERVENTION

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• adapt an existing culturally competent Cherokee theoretical model and school-based intervention targeting substance abuse prevention and intervention for use with Native American Indian adolescents in southwestern Oklahoma

• examine the impact of the adapted Native American Indian Self-Reliance Substance Abuse Intervention tool on cultural protective factors associated with substance abuse involvement by Native American Indian youth from Native American Indian Plains tribes.

STUDY AIMS

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• Following implementation of the adapted NativeAmerican Self-Reliance Intervention:

• there will be a significant increase in self-reliance (α ≤ .05) • there will be a significant decrease in reported substance

abuse (α ≤ .05)

• there will be significant decrease in perceived stress (α ≤ .05)

• Design: Pre-test/post-test quantitative study

RESEARCH HYPOTHESES/DESIGN

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• Institutional Review Boards at New Mexico State University and the University of Oklahoma.

• Support letter from the Comanche Nation

• Certificate of Confidentiality from the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

• Permission of superintendents and principal's of the high schools.

• Parental permission and student assent

HUMAN SUBJECTS PROTECTION

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Convenience sample obtained using two rural high schools in SW Oklahoma with high populations of Plains tribal adolescents; i.e., Comanche, Kiowa, Apache, Wichita, Lenape, Caddo

Sample size • N = 44• Power

Inclusion Criteria:• Self-identified member of one of the Plains tribes of SW

Oklahoma.• Attending one of the designated schools, in grades 9-12.• Between the ages of 16-19• Referred by a counselor due to being at risk for substance use or

abuse

SAMPLE

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• Demographic Questionnaire • Adapted Cherokee Self-Reliance

Questionnaire• Global Appraisal of Individual Needs-

Quick (GAIN-Q)• Written Stories of Stress using the

Linguistic Inquiry Word Count (LIWC)

INSTRUMENTS

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• 3 GROUPS• 8.5 WEEKS• 10 HOURS OF INSTRUCTION• GROUP RULES• ADAPTED TOPIC CONTENT

NATIVE TALKING CIRCLE INTERVENTION

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Obtained informed consent/assent

Pre-intervention data collection• occurred at first session

• Demographic questionnaire• Native Self-Reliance• GAIN-Q• Written Stories of Stress

Post-intervention data collection• demographic questionnaire was omitted

DATA COLLECTION

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• Descriptive statistics

• Paired t-test

• Cronbach alpha

• SPSS

• LIWC

DATA ANALYSIS

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Age• 16 = 26 (59)• 17 = 12 (27)• 18 = 6 (14)Gender• M= 20 (45)• F=24 (55)Grade• 10th = 30 (68)• 11th = 9 (20)• 12th = 5 (11) Tribe• Comanche = 32 (73)• Kiowa = 8 (18)• Apache = 4 (9)

Living Situation• Parent(s) = 40 (91) • Extended = 23 (52)Siblings• Yes = 42 (95) • No =2 (5)Drug Use• Alcohol = 11 (25)• Marijuana = 4 (9)• None = 29 (66) Team/School Activities• Yes = 28 (64)• No = 16 (36)

Participant Demographics

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• Pre-test baseline mean of 86.23 (SD=23.40) increased to a post-intervention mean of 92.20 (SD=18.46), SE = .369, medium effect size

• Supporting the hypothesis that self-reliance would increase post-intervention

NATIVE SELF-RELIANCE QUESTIONNAIRE

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  Baseline Post Intervention

Paired Differences 

Indices

M SD M SD M SD t df p value

General Life Problems (N=41)

9.536 7.504 7.415 5.723 2.122 5.887 2.308 40 .013

Internal Behaviors(N=44)  

3.636 4.098 2.023 2.937 1.614 3.452 3.101 43 .002

External Behaviors Internal Behaviors(N=42)  

4.357 4.477 3.310 3.453 1.048 4.884 1.390 41 .086

Substance Problems Internal Behaviors(N=34) 

2.265 4.266 1.265 2.968 1.000 3.162 1.844 33 .037

GAIN-Q Indices at Baseline, Post-Intervention and Paired T-Test Results

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Baseline  Post Intervention

 Paired Differences

Dimensions of Words

M SD M SD M SD t df p

Positive Emotion 

4.431 2.653 3.600 2.075 .8311 2.955 2.308 25 .082

Negative Emotion  

5.120 1.929 6.037 2.430 -.9165 3.319 3.101 25 .086

Social 

9.411 3.329 10.860 4.024 -1.448 4.505 1.390 25 .057

LIWC WORD USE RESULTS AT BASELINE, POST-INTERVENTION, AND PAIRED T-TEST

(N=26)

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• Groups were facilitated by a Native American Indian woman with extensive adolescent group experience

• The intervention was flexible enough to allow the participants to express themselves in multiple ways

• Convenience sample• Self-identified tribal members• Self-reporting of substance use could

be biased

STRENGTHS AND LIMITATIONS

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This study:• addresses a significant problem for

Native American Indian adolescents and the specific tailoring of a successful intervention to meet the needs of the participants

• demonstrates the effectiveness of specific tailoring using traditional and contemporary life experiences

• provides a template/model for use in future studies

DISCUSSION

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• Native Talking Circle Intervention requires replication of the study with larger sample sizes and longitudinal studies to address long term effectiveness

• Validation of the effectiveness of the CMCT as a timely cultural tailoring model across subsets of Indigenous cultural groups

RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FURTHER RESEARCH

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QUESTIONS?

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Thank You

Wado!

TO THE AUDIENCE


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