Title of article :
Mental disorders among parents/caretakers of American Indian
early adolescents in the Northern Midwest
Author/Authors :
Les. B. Whitbeck، نويسنده , , Dan Hoyt، نويسنده , , Kurt Johnson، نويسنده , , Xiaojin Chen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Background This study reports prevalence
and comorbidty of five DSM-III-R diagnoses
(alcohol abuse, alcohol dependence, drug abuse, major
depressive episode, and generalized anxiety disorder)
among American Indian and Canadian First
Nations parents/caretakers of children aged 10–
12 years from the Northern Midwest United States
and Canada. Lifetime prevalence rates were compared
to adults in the National Comorbidity Survey (NCS)
and Southwest and Northern Plains cultures from the
AI-SUPERPFP study. Method Native interviewers
used computer-assisted personal interviews to
administer the University of Michigan Composite
International Diagnostic Interview (UM-CIDI) to 861
tribally enrolled parents and caretakers (625 females;
236 males) of 741 tribally enrolled children aged
10–12 years. Fathers/male caretakers ranged in age
from 21 years to 68 years with an average age of
41 years; mothers/female caretakers ranged in age
from 17 years to 77 years with an average of 39 years.
Results About three-fourths (74.6%) of the adults met
lifetime criteria for one of the five disorders;
approximately one-third (31.6%) met lifetime criteria
for two or more of the five disorders. Prevalence of
the substance use disorders was higher than those in
the general population (NCS); prevalence of internalizing
disorders (major depressive disorder and
generalized anxiety disorder) was very similar to
those in the general population. Prevalence rates for
alcohol abuse among the Northern Midwest adults
were higher than those reported for Southwest and
Northern Plains Tribes, but rates of alcohol dependency
were very similar across cultures. Conclusions
The higher prevalence rates for some mental
disorders found for the Northern Midwest are discussed
in terms of potential method variance. The
Northern Midwest results reflect unique patterns of
psychiatric disorders in the ubiquity of substance
abuse disorders and the co-occurrence of substance
abuse disorders with internalizing disorders. Reducing
lifetime occurrences of substance abuse disorders
would have an enormous positive impact on the
mental health of this population.
Keywords :
mental disorder – American Indian
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)