Crouch Maria C, Cheromiah Salazar Maredyth B R, Harris Steven J, Rosich Rosellen M
Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Alaska Anchorage, Anchorage, AK, USA.
Chronic Stress (Thousand Oaks). 2023 Jan 18;7:24705470221149479. doi: 10.1177/24705470221149479. eCollection 2023 Jan-Dec.
American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) peoples are disproportionately impacted by substance use disorders (SUDs) and health consequences in contrast to all racial/ethnic groups in the United States. This is alarming that AI/AN peoples experience significant health disparities and disease burden that are exacerbated by settler-colonial traumas expressed through prejudice, stigma, discrimination, and systemic and structural inequities. One such compounding disease for AI/AN peoples that is expected to increase but little is known is Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD). AI/AN approaches for understanding and treating disease have long been rooted in culture, context, and worldview. Thus, culturally based prevention, service, and caregiving are critical to optimal outcomes, and investigating cultural beliefs regarding ADRD can provide insights into linkages of chronic stressors, disease, prevention and treatment, and the role of substance misuse.
To understand the cultural practices and values that compose AI/AN Elder beliefs and perceptions of ADRD, a grounded theory, qualitative study was conducted. Twelve semistructured interviews with AI/AN Elders (M age = 73; female = 8, male = 4) assessed the etiology, course, treatment, caregiving, and the culturally derived meanings of ADRD, which provides a frame of understanding social determinants of health (SDH; eg, healthcare equity, community context) and impacts (eg, historical trauma, substance misuse) across the lifespan.
Qualitative analyses specific to disease etiology, barriers to treatment, and SDH revealed 6 interrelated and nested subthemes elucidating both the resilience and the chronic stressors and barriers faced by AI/AN peoples that directly impact prevention, disease progression, and related services: (1) postcolonial distress; (2) substance misuse; (3) distrust of Western medicine; (4) structural inequities; (5) walking in two worlds; and (6) decolonizing and indigenizing medicine.
Barriers to optimal wellbeing and SDH for AI/AN peoples are understood through SUDs, ADRD, and compounding symptoms upheld by colonial traumas and postcolonial distress. En masse historical and contemporary discrimination and stress, particularly within Western medicine, both contextualizes the present and points to the ways in which the strengths, wisdom, and balance inherent in AI/AN culture are imperative to the holistic health and healing of AI/AN peoples, families, and communities.
与美国所有种族/族裔群体相比,美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民(AI/AN)受物质使用障碍(SUDs)及其健康后果的影响尤为严重。令人担忧的是,AI/AN群体经历着显著的健康差距和疾病负担,而定居者殖民创伤通过偏见、耻辱、歧视以及系统性和结构性不平等表现出来,这加剧了这些问题。对于AI/AN群体来说,一种预计会增加但却鲜为人知的复杂疾病是阿尔茨海默病及相关痴呆症(ADRD)。长期以来,AI/AN群体理解和治疗疾病的方法都植根于文化、背景和世界观。因此,基于文化的预防、服务和护理对于实现最佳效果至关重要,研究关于ADRD的文化信仰可以深入了解慢性应激源、疾病、预防和治疗之间的联系,以及物质滥用的作用。
为了理解构成AI/AN老年人对ADRD的信仰和认知的文化习俗和价值观,进行了一项基于扎根理论的定性研究。对12名AI/AN老年人(平均年龄 = 73岁;女性 = 8名,男性 = 4名)进行了半结构化访谈,评估了ADRD的病因、病程、治疗、护理以及其文化衍生意义,这为理解整个生命周期中的健康社会决定因素(SDH;例如,医疗保健公平性、社区背景)和影响(例如,历史创伤、物质滥用)提供了一个框架。
针对疾病病因、治疗障碍和SDH的定性分析揭示了6个相互关联且嵌套的子主题,阐明了AI/AN群体所面临的恢复力以及直接影响预防、疾病进展和相关服务的慢性应激源和障碍:(1)后殖民困境;(2)物质滥用;(3)对西医的不信任;(4)结构不平等;(5)游走于两个世界;(6)医学的去殖民化和本土化。
通过SUDs、ADRD以及殖民创伤和后殖民困境所带来的复合症状,可以理解AI/AN群体实现最佳健康状态和SDH所面临的障碍。大量的历史和当代歧视与压力,尤其是在西医领域,既为当下提供了背景,也指出了AI/AN文化中固有的优势、智慧和平衡对于AI/AN群体、家庭和社区的整体健康与康复至关重要的方式。