Tobacco Smoking Among First Nations Youth Living On-Reserve and in Northern Communities: A Mixed Methods Study

Pub Date : 2020-12-22 DOI:10.18584/iipj.2020.11.4.13369
L. Wright, C. Dell
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Abstract

The prevalence of tobacco smoking among First Nations youth living on reserve and in Northern communities is significantly higher than off-reserve Indigenous youth in Southern communities and non-Indigenous youth, although the majority do not smoke. Using a mixed-methods approach, we examine factors that support on-reserve First Nations youth’s resilience to smoking. Logistic regression analyses using data from the nationally representative First Nations Regional Early Childhood, Education, and Employment Survey suggest that not using other substances, having friends who do not smoke or use other substances, and having good mental health is associated with not smoking. A review of select community initiatives and in-depth interviews with First Nations anti-tobacco initiative managers and frontline workers about the initiatives also revealed the need for gender- and community-specific programming, recognition of Indigenous social determinants of health, and addressing the normalization of smoking in some community contexts.
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居住在保留区和北部社区的第一民族青年吸烟:一项混合方法研究
居住在保留区和北部社区的第一民族青年的吸烟率明显高于南部社区的保留区外土著青年和非土著青年,尽管大多数人不吸烟。使用混合方法的方法,我们检查的因素,支持在保留地第一民族青年吸烟的弹性。使用具有全国代表性的第一民族区域幼儿、教育和就业调查数据进行的逻辑回归分析表明,不使用其他物质,有不吸烟或不使用其他物质的朋友,以及有良好的心理健康与不吸烟有关。对某些社区倡议的审查以及对土著反烟草倡议管理人员和第一线工作人员关于这些倡议的深入访谈也表明,需要制定针对性别和社区的方案,承认土著健康的社会决定因素,并解决在某些社区环境中吸烟正常化的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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