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Journal Article

Citation

Stanley LR, Harness SD, Swaim RC, Beauvais F. Public Health Rep. (1974) 2014; 129(2): 156-163.

Affiliation

Colorado State University, Tri-Ethnic Center for Prevention Research, Fort Collins, CO.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Association of Schools of Public Health)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

24587550

PMCID

PMC3904895

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Understanding the similarities and differences between substance use rates for American Indian (AI) young people and young people nationally can better inform prevention and treatment efforts. We compared substance use rates for a large sample of AI students living on or near reservations for the years 2009-2012 with national prevalence rates from Monitoring the Future (MTF). METHODS: We identified and sampled schools on or near AI reservations by region; 1,399 students in sampled schools were administered the American Drug and Alcohol Survey. We computed lifetime, annual, and last-month prevalence measures by grade and compared them with MTF results for the same time period. RESULTS: Prevalence rates for AI students were significantly higher than national rates for nearly all substances, especially for 8th graders. Rates of marijuana use were very high, with lifetime use higher than 50% for all grade groups. Other findings of interest included higher binge drinking rates and OxyContin(®) use for AI students. CONCLUSIONS: The results from this study demonstrate that adolescent substance use is still a major problem among reservation-based AI adolescent students, especially 8th graders, where prevalence rates were sometimes dramatically higher than MTF rates. Given the high rates of substance use-related problems on reservations, such as academic failure, delinquency, violent criminal behavior, suicidality, and alcohol-related mortality, the costs to members of this population and to society will continue to be much too high until a comprehensive understanding of the root causes of substance use are established.


Language: en

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