An Alcohol Abuse Early Intervention Approach with Mi’kmaq Adolescents

This paper describes the development of and pilot results for an alcohol abuse early intervention program targeting at-risk Mi’kmaq youth conducted in partnership with the communities in which these youth live and the schools which they attend. This intervention was based on a previously-established...

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Main Authors: Mushquash, Christopher J., Comeau, Nancy, Stewart, Sherry H.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: First Nations Child and Family Caring Society 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://fpcfr.com/index.php/FPCFR/article/view/34
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author Mushquash, Christopher J.
Comeau, Nancy
Stewart, Sherry H.
author_facet Mushquash, Christopher J.
Comeau, Nancy
Stewart, Sherry H.
author_sort Mushquash, Christopher J.
collection First Peoples Child & Family Review
description This paper describes the development of and pilot results for an alcohol abuse early intervention program targeting at-risk Mi’kmaq youth conducted in partnership with the communities in which these youth live and the schools which they attend. This intervention was based on a previously-established, successful psychoeducational and cognitive-behavioral approach for at-risk adolescent drinkers from the majority culture that focuses on differentpersonality pathways to alcohol abuse in youth (Conrod, Stewart, Comeau, & MacLean, 2006). Through partnership and collaboration with two Mi’kmaq communities, the original intervention was adapted to be culturally appropriate for Mi’kmaq youth. The culturally-adapted intervention included traditional Mi’kmaq knowledge and teachings in order to make the program as meaningful and relevant as possible in the partner communities (Comeau et al., 2005). The pilot results were encouraging. Compared to pre-intervention, students who participated in the intervention drank less, engaged in less binge-drinking episodes (i.e., 5 drinks or more/occasion), had fewer alcoholrelated problems, and were more likely to abstain from alcohol use. Moreover, students who participated in the intervention also reduced their marijuana use at four-month post-intervention, even though the intervention was specifically designed to target alcohol misuse. No such significant changes were observed in a non-random control group of eligible students who did not participate in the intervention. Future research should determine if this intervention is effective for at-risk youth in other First Nations communities across Canada, and whether the promising, but preliminary results with marijuana mean that the benefits of the intervention might extend to adolescents’ use of substances other than alcohol.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre First Nations
Mi’kmaq
genre_facet First Nations
Mi’kmaq
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
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op_source First Peoples Child & Family Review; Vol. 3 No. 2 (2007): Special Issue: Adolescent development, mental health, and promising research directions for Aboriginal youth; 17-26
Revue des enfants et des familles des Premiers peuples; Vol. 3 No 2 (2007): Special Issue: Adolescent development, mental health, and promising research directions for Aboriginal youth; 17-26
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spelling ftjfpcfr:oai:fpcfr.journals.sfu.ca:article/34 2025-01-16T21:56:39+00:00 An Alcohol Abuse Early Intervention Approach with Mi’kmaq Adolescents Mushquash, Christopher J. Comeau, Nancy Stewart, Sherry H. 2007-06-13 application/pdf https://fpcfr.com/index.php/FPCFR/article/view/34 eng eng First Nations Child and Family Caring Society https://fpcfr.com/index.php/FPCFR/article/view/34/73 https://fpcfr.com/index.php/FPCFR/article/view/34 First Peoples Child & Family Review; Vol. 3 No. 2 (2007): Special Issue: Adolescent development, mental health, and promising research directions for Aboriginal youth; 17-26 Revue des enfants et des familles des Premiers peuples; Vol. 3 No 2 (2007): Special Issue: Adolescent development, mental health, and promising research directions for Aboriginal youth; 17-26 2293-6610 1708-489X info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion research-article 2007 ftjfpcfr 2024-05-31T03:00:59Z This paper describes the development of and pilot results for an alcohol abuse early intervention program targeting at-risk Mi’kmaq youth conducted in partnership with the communities in which these youth live and the schools which they attend. This intervention was based on a previously-established, successful psychoeducational and cognitive-behavioral approach for at-risk adolescent drinkers from the majority culture that focuses on differentpersonality pathways to alcohol abuse in youth (Conrod, Stewart, Comeau, & MacLean, 2006). Through partnership and collaboration with two Mi’kmaq communities, the original intervention was adapted to be culturally appropriate for Mi’kmaq youth. The culturally-adapted intervention included traditional Mi’kmaq knowledge and teachings in order to make the program as meaningful and relevant as possible in the partner communities (Comeau et al., 2005). The pilot results were encouraging. Compared to pre-intervention, students who participated in the intervention drank less, engaged in less binge-drinking episodes (i.e., 5 drinks or more/occasion), had fewer alcoholrelated problems, and were more likely to abstain from alcohol use. Moreover, students who participated in the intervention also reduced their marijuana use at four-month post-intervention, even though the intervention was specifically designed to target alcohol misuse. No such significant changes were observed in a non-random control group of eligible students who did not participate in the intervention. Future research should determine if this intervention is effective for at-risk youth in other First Nations communities across Canada, and whether the promising, but preliminary results with marijuana mean that the benefits of the intervention might extend to adolescents’ use of substances other than alcohol. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations Mi’kmaq First Peoples Child & Family Review Canada
spellingShingle Mushquash, Christopher J.
Comeau, Nancy
Stewart, Sherry H.
An Alcohol Abuse Early Intervention Approach with Mi’kmaq Adolescents
title An Alcohol Abuse Early Intervention Approach with Mi’kmaq Adolescents
title_full An Alcohol Abuse Early Intervention Approach with Mi’kmaq Adolescents
title_fullStr An Alcohol Abuse Early Intervention Approach with Mi’kmaq Adolescents
title_full_unstemmed An Alcohol Abuse Early Intervention Approach with Mi’kmaq Adolescents
title_short An Alcohol Abuse Early Intervention Approach with Mi’kmaq Adolescents
title_sort alcohol abuse early intervention approach with mi’kmaq adolescents
url https://fpcfr.com/index.php/FPCFR/article/view/34