PERSONALITY AND MOTIVES FOR ALCOHOL USE IN ABORIGINAL ADOLESCENTS: A CULTURALLY RELEVANT APPROACH TO ALCOHOL ABUSE EARLY INTERVENTION

There are high levels of alcohol abuse and associated problems among Aboriginal youth in Canada. In order to understand high-risk adolescents’ relationships with alcohol, four inter-related questions were explored: 1) How do youth at particular risk of alcohol abuse, understand their reasons for alc...

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Main Author: Mushquash, Christopher
Other Authors: Department of Psychology, Doctor of Philosophy, Dr. Laurence Kirmayer, Dr. Tracy Taylor-Helmick, Dr. Patrick McGrath, Dr. Sophie Jacques, Dr. Sherry Stewart, Received, Yes
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/14241
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spelling ftdalhouse:oai:DalSpace.library.dal.ca:10222/14241 2024-06-02T08:06:39+00:00 PERSONALITY AND MOTIVES FOR ALCOHOL USE IN ABORIGINAL ADOLESCENTS: A CULTURALLY RELEVANT APPROACH TO ALCOHOL ABUSE EARLY INTERVENTION Mushquash, Christopher Department of Psychology Doctor of Philosophy Dr. Laurence Kirmayer Dr. Tracy Taylor-Helmick Dr. Patrick McGrath Dr. Sophie Jacques Dr. Sherry Stewart Received Yes 2011-09-06T14:16:05Z http://hdl.handle.net/10222/14241 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10222/14241 2011 ftdalhouse 2024-05-06T11:40:24Z There are high levels of alcohol abuse and associated problems among Aboriginal youth in Canada. In order to understand high-risk adolescents’ relationships with alcohol, four inter-related questions were explored: 1) How do youth at particular risk of alcohol abuse, understand their reasons for alcohol use?; 2) How does personality relate to reasons for drinking for First Nations adolescents?; 3) Can established alcohol abuse brief early interventions be effectively tailored to meet the needs of high personality risk First Nations adolescents?, and 4) Do interventions developed specifically for First Nations youth with varying personality risk characteristics and maladaptive motives for alcohol use effectively reduce drinking behaviour and problems associated with alcohol use? The factor-structure of Cooper’s (1994) motivational model of adolescent alcohol use was examined among a group of Mi’kmaq adolescents. Rather than the hypothesized four-factor model, a three-factor model better explained these data, where Enhancement and Social motives combined into a single motive reflective of positive reinforcement. A qualitative follow-up study showed that these youth had a tendency toward drinking for Enhancement motives rather than for Social affiliation. Next, a quantitative examination of the relationships between personality factors and motives for alcohol use in First Nations adolescents showed consistency with majority culture findings; Impulsivity and Sensation Seeking was associated with Enhancement motives for alcohol use; Anxiety Sensitivity was associated with Conformity motives; and Hopelessness was associated with Coping motives. Finally, an alcohol early intervention, which combined promising Western scientific approaches with traditional knowledge, was delivered to at-risk First Nations youth. Compared to eligible students who did not participate in the intervention program, intervention completers drank less frequently, engaged in less heavy episodic drinking, had lower levels of alcohol-related ... Other/Unknown Material First Nations Mi’kmaq Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
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language English
description There are high levels of alcohol abuse and associated problems among Aboriginal youth in Canada. In order to understand high-risk adolescents’ relationships with alcohol, four inter-related questions were explored: 1) How do youth at particular risk of alcohol abuse, understand their reasons for alcohol use?; 2) How does personality relate to reasons for drinking for First Nations adolescents?; 3) Can established alcohol abuse brief early interventions be effectively tailored to meet the needs of high personality risk First Nations adolescents?, and 4) Do interventions developed specifically for First Nations youth with varying personality risk characteristics and maladaptive motives for alcohol use effectively reduce drinking behaviour and problems associated with alcohol use? The factor-structure of Cooper’s (1994) motivational model of adolescent alcohol use was examined among a group of Mi’kmaq adolescents. Rather than the hypothesized four-factor model, a three-factor model better explained these data, where Enhancement and Social motives combined into a single motive reflective of positive reinforcement. A qualitative follow-up study showed that these youth had a tendency toward drinking for Enhancement motives rather than for Social affiliation. Next, a quantitative examination of the relationships between personality factors and motives for alcohol use in First Nations adolescents showed consistency with majority culture findings; Impulsivity and Sensation Seeking was associated with Enhancement motives for alcohol use; Anxiety Sensitivity was associated with Conformity motives; and Hopelessness was associated with Coping motives. Finally, an alcohol early intervention, which combined promising Western scientific approaches with traditional knowledge, was delivered to at-risk First Nations youth. Compared to eligible students who did not participate in the intervention program, intervention completers drank less frequently, engaged in less heavy episodic drinking, had lower levels of alcohol-related ...
author2 Department of Psychology
Doctor of Philosophy
Dr. Laurence Kirmayer
Dr. Tracy Taylor-Helmick
Dr. Patrick McGrath
Dr. Sophie Jacques
Dr. Sherry Stewart
Received
Yes
author Mushquash, Christopher
spellingShingle Mushquash, Christopher
PERSONALITY AND MOTIVES FOR ALCOHOL USE IN ABORIGINAL ADOLESCENTS: A CULTURALLY RELEVANT APPROACH TO ALCOHOL ABUSE EARLY INTERVENTION
author_facet Mushquash, Christopher
author_sort Mushquash, Christopher
title PERSONALITY AND MOTIVES FOR ALCOHOL USE IN ABORIGINAL ADOLESCENTS: A CULTURALLY RELEVANT APPROACH TO ALCOHOL ABUSE EARLY INTERVENTION
title_short PERSONALITY AND MOTIVES FOR ALCOHOL USE IN ABORIGINAL ADOLESCENTS: A CULTURALLY RELEVANT APPROACH TO ALCOHOL ABUSE EARLY INTERVENTION
title_full PERSONALITY AND MOTIVES FOR ALCOHOL USE IN ABORIGINAL ADOLESCENTS: A CULTURALLY RELEVANT APPROACH TO ALCOHOL ABUSE EARLY INTERVENTION
title_fullStr PERSONALITY AND MOTIVES FOR ALCOHOL USE IN ABORIGINAL ADOLESCENTS: A CULTURALLY RELEVANT APPROACH TO ALCOHOL ABUSE EARLY INTERVENTION
title_full_unstemmed PERSONALITY AND MOTIVES FOR ALCOHOL USE IN ABORIGINAL ADOLESCENTS: A CULTURALLY RELEVANT APPROACH TO ALCOHOL ABUSE EARLY INTERVENTION
title_sort personality and motives for alcohol use in aboriginal adolescents: a culturally relevant approach to alcohol abuse early intervention
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10222/14241
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
Mi’kmaq
genre_facet First Nations
Mi’kmaq
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10222/14241
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