"We have to … work for wholeness no matter what": Family and culture promoting wellness, resilience, and transcendence.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Transcultural Psychiatry Pub Date : 2024-02-07 DOI:10.1177/13634615241227690
Catherine E McKinley
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Abstract

Sociocultural, mental, behavioral, and physical factors are interrelated associates of chronic health conditions-such as diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular disease-all of which are disproportionally high and drive much of the mortality and morbidity for Indigenous peoples. Indigenous worldviews conceptualize health holistically, with inseparability across social, spiritual, cultural, familial, mental, behavioral, physical, and social dimensions of wellness. Food, family, and culture are fundamental to Indigenous wellness. The purpose of this article is to use the Framework of Historical Oppression, Resilience, and Transcendence (FHORT) conceptualization of relational wellness to honor urban and rural U.S. Indigenous perspectives that highlight the intersections of family, culture, physical health, spiritual, and mental health to promote resilience and wellness. This research focused on interconnections between wellness, culture, health, and family. Thirty-one critical ethnographic interviews used a life-history approach with methodology following an Indigenous toolkit for ethical and culturally sensitive research strategies, such as building upon cultural strengths, engaging in long-term, relational commitments with communities, incorporating storytelling and oral history traditions, centering Indigenous methodologies and preferences, working with cultural insiders, and prioritizing the perspectives of Indigenous peoples. Emergent themes included: (a) roots of Indigenous wellness: cultural values promoting balance and connection; (b) practicing resilience: family transmission of health information; and (c) wholistic mental wellness and resilience, with the subtheme culture and wellness. Interventions can be developed in collaboration with tribes for optimum efficacy and cultural relevancy and can approach wellness holistically in culturally relevant ways that center foodways, culture, family, and spirituality.

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"我们必须......无论如何都要为完整而努力":家庭和文化促进健康、复原力和超越。
社会文化、精神、行为和身体因素是慢性健康问题--如糖尿病、肥胖症和心血管疾病--的相互关联因素,所有这些因素对原住民的死亡率和发病率都过高,并造成很大的影响。原住民的世界观从整体上看待健康问题,认为健康与社会、精神、文化、家庭、心理、行为、身体和社会等方面密不可分。食物、家庭和文化是原住民健康的基础。本文旨在利用 "历史压迫、复原力和超越框架"(FHORT)的关系健康概念,尊重美国城市和农村原住民的观点,强调家庭、文化、身体健康、精神和心理健康的交叉,以促进复原力和健康。这项研究的重点是健康、文化、健康和家庭之间的相互联系。31 次批判性人种学访谈采用了生命史方法,其方法论遵循了原住民道德和文化敏感性研究策略工具包,如利用文化优势、与社区进行长期关系承诺、纳入讲故事和口述历史传统、以原住民方法和偏好为中心、与文化内部人士合作以及优先考虑原住民的观点。新出现的主题包括(a) 土著人健康的根源:促进平衡和联系的文化价值观;(b) 实践复原力:家庭传递健康信息;(c) 整体心理健康和复原力,副主题为文化和健康。可以与部落合作制定干预措施,以达到最佳效果和文化相关性,并可以以饮食方式、文化、家庭和精神为中心,以文化相关的方式全面对待健康问题。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
12.00%
发文量
93
期刊介绍: Transcultural Psychiatry is a fully peer reviewed international journal that publishes original research and review articles on cultural psychiatry and mental health. Cultural psychiatry is concerned with the social and cultural determinants of psychopathology and psychosocial treatments of the range of mental and behavioural problems in individuals, families and human groups. In addition to the clinical research methods of psychiatry, it draws from the disciplines of psychiatric epidemiology, medical anthropology and cross-cultural psychology.
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