Publications
IWRI
Publications
2012
Walters, K. L.; LaMarr, J.; Levy, R. L.; Pearson, C. R.; Maresca, T.; Mohammed, S. A.; Simoni, J. M.; Evans-Campbell, T.; Fredriksen-Goldsen, K.; Fryberg, S.; Jobe, J. B.
In: The journal of primary prevention, vol. 33, no. 4, pp. 197-207, 2012, ISSN: 0278-095x.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Evans-Campbell, Pearson C. R., Walters K. L.
@article{Walters2012,
title = {Project həli?dxw: The Development and Evaluation Design of a Tribally Based Cardiovascular Disease Prevention Intervention for American Indian Families},
author = {Walters, K.L. and LaMarr, J. and Levy, R. L. and Pearson, C.R. and Maresca, T. and Mohammed, S.A. and Simoni, J.M. and Evans-Campbell, T. and Fredriksen-Goldsen, K. and Fryberg, S. and Jobe, J.B.},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22965622},
issn = {0278-095x},
year = {2012},
date = {2012-09-12},
journal = {The journal of primary prevention},
volume = {33},
number = {4},
pages = {197-207},
abstract = {American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) populations are disproportionately at risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD), diabetes, and obesity, compared with the general US population. This article describes the həli?dx(w)/Healthy Hearts Across Generations project, an AIAN-run, tribally based randomized controlled trial (January 2010-June 2012) designed to evaluate a culturally appropriate CVD risk prevention program for AI parents residing in the Pacific Northwest of the United States. At-risk AIAN adults (n = 135) were randomly assigned to either a CVD prevention intervention arm or a comparison arm focusing on increasing family cohesiveness, communication, and connectedness. Both year-long conditions included 1 month of motivational interviewing counseling followed by personal coach contacts and family life-skills classes. Blood chemistry, blood pressure, body mass index, food intake, and physical activity were measured at baseline and at 4- and 12-month follow-up times},
keywords = {Evans-Campbell, Pearson C. R., Walters K. L.},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) populations are disproportionately at risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD), diabetes, and obesity, compared with the general US population. This article describes the həli?dx(w)/Healthy Hearts Across Generations project, an AIAN-run, tribally based randomized controlled trial (January 2010-June 2012) designed to evaluate a culturally appropriate CVD risk prevention program for AI parents residing in the Pacific Northwest of the United States. At-risk AIAN adults (n = 135) were randomly assigned to either a CVD prevention intervention arm or a comparison arm focusing on increasing family cohesiveness, communication, and connectedness. Both year-long conditions included 1 month of motivational interviewing counseling followed by personal coach contacts and family life-skills classes. Blood chemistry, blood pressure, body mass index, food intake, and physical activity were measured at baseline and at 4- and 12-month follow-up times
Evans-Campbell, T.; K., Walters; Pearson, C. R.
Indian Boarding School, Substance Use, And Mental Health Among Two-Spirit urban American Indian/Alaska Natives Journal Article
In: The American journal of drug and alcohol abuse, vol. 38, no. 5, pp. 421-7, 2012, ISSN: 0095-2990.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Evans-Campbell, Pearson C. R., Walters K. L.
@article{Evans-Campbell2012,
title = {Indian Boarding School, Substance Use, And Mental Health Among Two-Spirit urban American Indian/Alaska Natives},
author = {Evans-Campbell, T. and Walters K. and Pearson, C.R.},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22931076},
issn = {0095-2990},
year = {2012},
date = {2012-08-31},
journal = {The American journal of drug and alcohol abuse},
volume = {38},
number = {5},
pages = {421-7},
abstract = {BACKGROUND:
Systematic efforts of assimilation removed many Native children from their tribal communities and placed in non-Indian-run residential schools.
OBJECTIVES:
To explore substance use and mental health concerns among a community-based sample of 447 urban two-spirit American Indian/Alaska Native adults who had attended boarding school as children and/or who were raised by someone who attended boarding school.
METHOD:
Eighty-two respondents who had attended Indian boarding school as children were compared to respondents with no history of boarding school with respect to mental health and substance use.
RESULTS:
Former boarding school attendees reported higher rates of current illicit drug use and living with alcohol use disorder, and were significantly more likely to have attempted suicide and experienced suicidal thoughts in their lifetime compared to non-attendees. About 39% of the sample had been raised by someone who attended boarding school. People raised by boarding school attendees were significantly more likely to have a general anxiety disorder, experience posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms, and have suicidal thoughts in their lifetime compared to others.},
keywords = {Evans-Campbell, Pearson C. R., Walters K. L.},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
BACKGROUND:
Systematic efforts of assimilation removed many Native children from their tribal communities and placed in non-Indian-run residential schools.
OBJECTIVES:
To explore substance use and mental health concerns among a community-based sample of 447 urban two-spirit American Indian/Alaska Native adults who had attended boarding school as children and/or who were raised by someone who attended boarding school.
METHOD:
Eighty-two respondents who had attended Indian boarding school as children were compared to respondents with no history of boarding school with respect to mental health and substance use.
RESULTS:
Former boarding school attendees reported higher rates of current illicit drug use and living with alcohol use disorder, and were significantly more likely to have attempted suicide and experienced suicidal thoughts in their lifetime compared to non-attendees. About 39% of the sample had been raised by someone who attended boarding school. People raised by boarding school attendees were significantly more likely to have a general anxiety disorder, experience posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms, and have suicidal thoughts in their lifetime compared to others.
Systematic efforts of assimilation removed many Native children from their tribal communities and placed in non-Indian-run residential schools.
OBJECTIVES:
To explore substance use and mental health concerns among a community-based sample of 447 urban two-spirit American Indian/Alaska Native adults who had attended boarding school as children and/or who were raised by someone who attended boarding school.
METHOD:
Eighty-two respondents who had attended Indian boarding school as children were compared to respondents with no history of boarding school with respect to mental health and substance use.
RESULTS:
Former boarding school attendees reported higher rates of current illicit drug use and living with alcohol use disorder, and were significantly more likely to have attempted suicide and experienced suicidal thoughts in their lifetime compared to non-attendees. About 39% of the sample had been raised by someone who attended boarding school. People raised by boarding school attendees were significantly more likely to have a general anxiety disorder, experience posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms, and have suicidal thoughts in their lifetime compared to others.