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1.
J Ethn Cult Divers Soc Work ; 30(1): 122-137, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33732096

ABSTRACT

Relationship to place is integral to Indigenous health. A qualitative, secondary phenomenological analysis of in-depth interviews with four non-Choctaw Indigenous women participating in an outdoor, experiential tribally-specific Choctaw health leadership study uncovered culturally grounded narratives using thematic analysis as an analytic approach. Results revealed that physically being in historical trauma sites of other Indigenous groups involved a multi-faceted process that facilitated embodied stress by connecting participants with their own historical and contemporary traumas. Participants also experienced embodied resilience through connectedness to place and collective resistance. Implications point to the role of place in developing collective resistance and resilience through culturally and methodologically innovative approaches.

2.
J Trauma Dissociation ; 22(2): 220-240, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33480826

ABSTRACT

Trauma recovery for racial and ethnic groups experiencing ongoing systemic violence and discrimination requires a framework that simultaneously addresses harms and strengths. Historical trauma (HT) is a social determinant of health emanating from targeted mass group-level harm. Posttraumatic growth (PTG) focuses on positive shifts in individuals coping with trauma. This article highlights the unique contributions of these two distinct bodies of literature to inform trauma recovery. We explore areas of overlap, gaps, and tensions between the concepts to present an HT-PTG conceptual framework. The HT-PTG framework combines HT's focus on socio-structural-historical experiences in racial and ethnic groups targeted for oppression with PTG's descriptions of characteristics of growth. Specifically, five mass group-level domains of growth, centering healing, creativity, growth, and transformation are described. The ancestral legacies of the authors, including American Indian, Indigenous Mexican, African American, Puerto Rican, and Indigenous Taiwanese, inform the HT-PTG framework. This paper presents implications for trauma-recovery research and practice.


Subject(s)
Historical Trauma , Posttraumatic Growth, Psychological , Adaptation, Psychological , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Humans , Violence
3.
Front Public Health ; 9: 789865, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35127622

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: "Mexican American Indian" (MAI) is a large and diverse population for which little empirical research on alcohol and other drug (AOD) use and HIV is available, yet for which there is a disproportionate risk. Indigenous health narratives and participation in place- and settings-based cultural practices can be protective in chronic and co-occurring disease prevention and health promotion for Indigenous people. This study explores the role of participation in cultural dance in generating narratives of prevention and health promotion among a sample of MAIs from an Urban Danza Mexica Community (UDMC), framed within a decolonizing narratives of health (DNOH) model. METHODS: This secondary data analysis (n = 9) is drawn from a qualitative AOD and HIV health needs assessment of UDMC living in the Pacific Northwest and the Rocky Mountain West (n = 21). This study uses a community-based participatory research approach and employs narrative, Indigenized methods to analyze in-depth interviews from adult cisgender females (n = 5) and males (n = 4). The DNOH model is developed as a relational, analytic framework that contextualizes Indigenous stories in relationship to three distinct yet interconnected levels-the personal, the communal, and Indigeneity in the larger world. These levels of narrative analysis function as culturally grounded, relational pathways through which to articulate health education and promotion approaches. RESULTS: Narratives delve into the complex and nuanced relationships within participants' internal worlds (personal), between themselves and their Danza community (communal), and between themselves and their complex, intersectional Indigenous identities within society (Indigeneity). Stories of ancestral teachings about health and prevention shared within the Danza circle create spaces wherein participants navigate complex conversations that resist oppressive colonial narratives, reconnect with and strengthen their Indigenous identities, and strive toward ancestral visions of health and well-being. DISCUSSION: This study contributes to Indigenized theoretical and methodological expansion and the development of place/settings-based, narrative, cultural health interventions aimed at preventing chronic and co-occurring disease and promoting wellness among populations similar to the UDMC. Identifying cultural practices as Native Hubs (relational, socially constructed places) that foster decolonizing narratives helps increase understanding of their role in public health education and promotion through recognition of Indigenous knowledge systems and frameworks.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections , Substance-Related Disorders , Adult , Community-Based Participatory Research , Female , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Health Education , Health Promotion/methods , Humans , Male , Substance-Related Disorders/prevention & control
4.
J Community Pract ; 27(3-4): 296-316, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33013154

ABSTRACT

The "Grand Challenges for Social Work," is a call to action for innovative responses to society's most pressing social problems. In this article, we respond to the "Grand Challenge" of Creating Social Responses to a Changing Environment from our perspective as Indigenous scholars. Over the last several decades, diminishing natural resources, pollution, over-consumption, and the exploitation of the natural environment have led to climate change events that disproportionately affect Indigenous peoples. We present how environmental changes impact Indigenous peoples and suggest culturally relevant responses for working with Indigenous communities. We propose a decolonizing cyclical, iterative process grounded in Indigenous Ways of Knowing.

5.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29889950

ABSTRACT

Cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death among American Indians and Alaska Natives (AI/AN). Utilizing narratives from members of a Pacific Northwest tribe, this paper explores perceptions about behaviors affecting cardiovascular health through tribal members' lived experiences related to place-based environmental historical trauma. Findings from narrative analysis indicate that ambivalence is an effect of historical trauma and complicates the adoption of protective cardiovascular health behaviors. Tribal narratives indicate a path to overcome this ambivalence stemming from historical environmental trauma through revitalization, adaptation, and re-integration of traditional cultural practices to contemporary contexts. By creating their own health promotion response, one that is not imposed or colonizing, tribal members are re-generating cultural practices and health behaviors associated with lowered risks of cardiovascular disease.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases/prevention & control , Health Behavior , Health Promotion/methods , Indians, North American/ethnology , Psychological Trauma/ethnology , Adult , Aged , Cardiovascular Diseases/ethnology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Negotiating , Northwestern United States/ethnology
6.
Health Place ; 40: 21-8, 2016 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27164432

ABSTRACT

This community-based research applied principles of wilderness experience programming and Indigenous knowledges in an exploratory intervention designed to address health disparities in a tribal community. Drawing on historical trauma frameworks, tribal members rewalked the Trail of Tears to consider its effect on contemporary tribal health. Qualitative data from tribal members suggest that engagement with place and experiential learning, particularly the physical and emotional challenge of the Trail, facilitated changes in health beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors. Deep engagement outside of traditional health service settings should be considered in interventions and may be particularly effective in promoting positive health behaviors in Native communities.


Subject(s)
Community-Based Participatory Research , Health Status Disparities , Indians, North American/psychology , Adult , Female , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice/ethnology , Health Promotion , Humans , Qualitative Research
7.
AIDS Educ Prev ; 25(1): 25-37, 2013 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23387949

ABSTRACT

American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) men who have sex with men (MSM) are considered particularly high risk for HIV transmission and acquisition. In a multi-site cross-sectional survey, 174 AIAN men reported having sex with a man in the past 12 months. We describe harm reduction strategies and sexual behavior by HIV serostatus and seroconcordant partnerships. About half (51.3%) of the respondents reported no anal sex or 100% condom use and 8% were in seroconcordant monogamous partnership. Of the 65 men who reported any sero-adaptive strategy (e.g., 100% seroconcordant partnership, strategic positioning or engaging in any strategy half or most of the time), only 35 (54.7%) disclosed their serostatus to their partners and 27 (41.5%) tested for HIV in the past 3 months. Public health messages directed towards AIAN MSM should continue to encourage risk reduction practices, including condom use and sero-adaptive behaviors. However, messages should emphasize the importance of HIV testing and HIV serostatus disclosure when relying solely on sero-adaptive practices.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections/prevention & control , Homosexuality, Male/statistics & numerical data , Indians, North American/psychology , Risk Reduction Behavior , Sexual Partners , Adolescent , Adult , Alaska , Condoms/statistics & numerical data , Cross-Sectional Studies , HIV Infections/ethnology , HIV Infections/psychology , HIV Infections/transmission , HIV Seronegativity , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Humans , Indians, North American/statistics & numerical data , Male , Middle Aged , Risk Factors , Risk-Taking , Socioeconomic Factors , Surveys and Questionnaires , Truth Disclosure , Unsafe Sex/statistics & numerical data , Urban Population , Young Adult
8.
Womens Health Issues ; 21(6 Suppl): S261-5, 2011 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22055677

ABSTRACT

HIV/AIDS is a critical and growing challenge to American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) women's health. Conceptually guided by the Indigenist Stress-Coping Model, this paper explores the historical and contemporary factors implicated in the HIV epidemic among AIAN women and the co-occurring epidemics of sexual violence and substance abuse. The authors also outline multiple indicators of resiliency in AIAN communities and stress the need for HIV prevention interventions for AIAN women to capitalize on cultural and community strengths.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Indians, North American , Inuit , Rape , Spouse Abuse , Substance-Related Disorders , Women's Health , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome , Culture , Epidemics , Female , HIV Infections/complications , HIV Infections/epidemiology , Humans , Male , Residence Characteristics , Stress, Psychological , Substance-Related Disorders/complications , United States/epidemiology
9.
Du Bois Rev ; 8(1): 179-189, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29805469

ABSTRACT

Increasingly, understanding how the role of historical events and context affect present-day health inequities has become a dominant narrative among Native American communities. Historical trauma, which consists of traumatic events targeting a community (e.g., forced relocation) that cause catastrophic upheaval, has been posited by Native communities and some researchers to have pernicious effects that persist across generations through a myriad of mechanisms from biological to behavioral. Consistent with contemporary societal determinants of health approaches, the impact of historical trauma calls upon researchers to explicitly examine theoretically and empirically how historical processes and contexts become embodied. Scholarship that theoretically engages how historically traumatic events become embodied and affect the magnitude and distribution of health inequities is clearly needed. However, the scholarship on historical trauma is limited. Some scholars have focused on these events as etiological agents to social and psychological distress; others have focused on events as an outcome (e.g., historical trauma response); others still have focused on these events as mechanisms or pathwaysby which historical trauma is transmitted; and others have focused on historical trauma-related factors (e.g., collective loss) that interact with proximal stressors. These varied conceptualizations of historical trauma have hindered the ability to cogently theorize it and its impact on Native health. The purpose of this article is to explicate the link between historical trauma and the concept of embodiment. After an interdisciplinary review of the "state of the discipline," we utilize ecosocial theory and the indigenist stress-coping model to argue that contemporary physical health reflects, in part, the embodiment of historical trauma. Future research directions are discussed.

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