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Rebuilding trust: a community, multiagency, state, and university partnership to improve behavioral health care for American Indian Youth, their families, and communities

✍ Scribed by Jessica R. Goodkind; Kimberly Ross-Toledo; Susie John; Janie Lee Hall; Lucille Ross; Lance Freeland; Ernest Coletta; Twila Becenti-Fundark; Charlene Poola; Regina Roanhorse; Christopher Lee


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
182 KB
Volume
39
Category
Article
ISSN
0090-4392

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

American Indian/Alaska Native youth represent the strength and survival of many Nations and Tribes. However, the aftermath of colonialism has resulted in numerous health disparities and challenges for Native youth, including the highest rate of suicide in the United States. With the aims of elucidating the causes of behavioral health disparities, eliminating them, and improving behavioral health care for Native youth, a partnership of providers, community members, and university faculty and staff completed a comprehensive literature review, conducted advisory meetings with 71 American Indian youth, parents, and elders, surveyed 25 service providers, and engaged in ongoing consultation with traditional practitioners. Results from the multiple sources were synthesized and are reported with 20 policy, provider, and research recommendations that recognize the importance of moving beyond exclusive reliance on western models of care and that seek to foster transformation of individuals, families, communities, behavioral health service systems of care, and social structures. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.