Alcohol Abuse in Urban Indian Adolescents and Women: A Longitudinal Study for Assessment and Risk Evaluation
Authors: Walker RD, Lambert MD., Walker PS, Kivlahan DR, Donovan DM, Howard MO
Publication Year: 1996
Last Updated: 2016-01-05
Journal: American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research
Keywords: Adolescence, Alcohol Drinking/Epidemiology; Alcoholism/Diagnosis; Mental Disorders/Epidemiology; Substance-Related Disorders/Diagnosis; Substance-Related Disorders/Epidemiology; Urban Population, Urban Indians
Abstract:
Empirical studies of American Indian health and mental health have focused primarily on reservation samples or small cross-sectional school-based or treatment samples. Few studies have addressed these issues among urban American Indian populations. This paper introduces an ongoing ten-year prospective longitudinal study of alcohol abuse, drug abuse, and mental health status in a community sample of urban American Indian adolescents and women. The study uses structured interviews and diagnostic assessments to identify risk factors for, and measure prevalence of, alcohol abuse, drug abuse, and psychopathology in 523 Indian youth and 276 Indian women. Study aims, rationale, research design, methods, sample characteristics, assessment instruments, and substance use prevalence are described, and methodological issues related to conducting longitudinal research are discussed.
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Source: Link to Original Article.
Source: https://www.ojp.gov/ncjrs/virtual-library/abstracts/alcohol-abuse-urban-indian-adolescents-and-women-longitudinal-study