Cultural Protection from Polysubstance Use Among Native American Adolescents and Young Adults

Abstract: Reservation-based Native American youth are at disproportionate risk for high-risk substance use. The culture-as-treatment hypothesis suggests aspects of tribal culture can support prevention and healing in this context; however, the protective role of communal mastery and tribal identity have yet to be fully explored. The objectives of this study were to investigate (1) the relationship between cultural factors and high-risk substance use, which includes polysubstance use, early initiation of alcohol and illicit drugs, and binge drinking, and (2) substance use frequency and prevalence of various substances via cross-sectional design. Multiple logistic regression modeling was used to analyze data from 288 tribal members (15-24 years of age) residing on/near the Fort Peck Reservation in the Northern Plains. When controlling for childhood trauma and school attendance, having at least a high school education (OR = 0.434, p = 0.028), increased communal mastery (OR = 0.931, p = 0.007), and higher levels of tribal identity (OR = 0.579, p = 0.009) were significantly associated with lower odds of polysubstance use. Overall prevalence of polysubstance use was 50%, and binge drinking had the highest single substance prevalence (66%). Prevalence of early initiation of substances (≤ 14 years) was inhalants (70%), alcohol (61%), marijuana (74%), methamphetamine (23%), and prescription drug misuse (23%). Hydrocodone, an opioid, was the most frequently misused prescription drug. Findings indicate programs focused on promoting education engagement, communal mastery, and tribal identity may mitigate substance use for Native American adolescents living in high-risk, reservation-based settings.

Link to Resource

This article is behind a paywall. For access, please submit the form below:

Request Article(s) Access

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Our grant funding stipulates that these articles only be distributed to the communities and partners connected to this site's mission.
If you have multiple requests, please enter each one on a different line.
This helps us ensure that these articles are being requested by a non-robot. 🙂

Overdose Prevention Hub for Tribes and Native Communities

© All Rights Reserved Seven Directions
Website by TDG Agency

Who We Are

The initiative for establishing an online one-stop native overdose prevention resource hub came about as one component of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control’s Opioid Overdose Prevention in Tribes. Learn More

Acknowledging Urban and Rural Native Communities

The TA Opioid Hub aims to provide culturally inclusive and tailored resources regarding Opioid Prevention for Indigenous communities, both urban and rural. Seven Directions recognizes the strengths and unique needs of Indigenous communities on both traditional lands and in urban areas. Learn More

Data Sovereignty Statement

As Indigenous scholars and allies, one of our main priorities is privacy and data sovereignty for those who visit our website. All the information on the Overdose Hub can be viewed without revealing or sharing personal information. Learn More