Understanding Mental and Behavioral Health of American Indian Youth: An Application of the Social Convoy Model

Objective: The purpose of this dissertation was to examine three distinct, yet related studies. The primary focus of each chapter is the examination of mental and behavioral health among North American Indigenous (American Indian, Alaska Native, and Canadian First Nations) youth - motivated by relat...

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Main Author: Ivanich, Jerreed D
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/dissertations/AAI10980201
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spelling ftunivnebraskali:oai:digitalcommons.unl.edu:dissertations-15642 2024-09-15T18:06:48+00:00 Understanding Mental and Behavioral Health of American Indian Youth: An Application of the Social Convoy Model Ivanich, Jerreed D 2018-01-01T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/dissertations/AAI10980201 ENG eng DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/dissertations/AAI10980201 ETD collection for University of Nebraska-Lincoln Sociology|Native American studies text 2018 ftunivnebraskali 2024-06-26T00:03:49Z Objective: The purpose of this dissertation was to examine three distinct, yet related studies. The primary focus of each chapter is the examination of mental and behavioral health among North American Indigenous (American Indian, Alaska Native, and Canadian First Nations) youth - motivated by relational perspectives. Method: Data for this dissertation came from baseline data of a larger randomized control trial of a culturally adapted evidence-based substance use prevention program among 375 youth and 304 caregivers across four reservations that share a similar language, history, and culture. Study 1 Results: The aim was to examine caregiver and youth agreement on internalizing and externalizing symptoms and identify unique predictors of agreement between youth and caregiver. This study shows that caregivers perceive significantly fewer internalizing symptoms compared to youth self-reports. Externalizing problems, were not significantly different between caregivers and youth. Diverging patterns are found that significantly reduce disagreement for internalizing compared to externalizing. Study 2 Results: The aim was to examine the role of sibling influence on problem behavior. Using a dyadic approach, bivariate analyses as well as actor-partner interdependence models (APIM) were conducted. Correlations suggest self-reported happiness with female caregiver is associated with externalizing behavior. Older siblings showed significant within group differences for externalizing problem behavior scores based on caregiver education level–caregivers with college degree or higher indicating the highest average externalizing scores relative to other education categories. No sibling/actor influences were noted in the API Models. Study 3 Results: The purpose of this study was to explore problem behavior among Indigenous youth using individual social convoy characteristics as predictors of externalizing behavior. Consistent with the extant literature, females, when compared to male counterparts, had significantly lower ... Text First Nations Alaska University of Nebraska-Lincoln: DigitalCommons@UNL
institution Open Polar
collection University of Nebraska-Lincoln: DigitalCommons@UNL
op_collection_id ftunivnebraskali
language English
topic Sociology|Native American studies
spellingShingle Sociology|Native American studies
Ivanich, Jerreed D
Understanding Mental and Behavioral Health of American Indian Youth: An Application of the Social Convoy Model
topic_facet Sociology|Native American studies
description Objective: The purpose of this dissertation was to examine three distinct, yet related studies. The primary focus of each chapter is the examination of mental and behavioral health among North American Indigenous (American Indian, Alaska Native, and Canadian First Nations) youth - motivated by relational perspectives. Method: Data for this dissertation came from baseline data of a larger randomized control trial of a culturally adapted evidence-based substance use prevention program among 375 youth and 304 caregivers across four reservations that share a similar language, history, and culture. Study 1 Results: The aim was to examine caregiver and youth agreement on internalizing and externalizing symptoms and identify unique predictors of agreement between youth and caregiver. This study shows that caregivers perceive significantly fewer internalizing symptoms compared to youth self-reports. Externalizing problems, were not significantly different between caregivers and youth. Diverging patterns are found that significantly reduce disagreement for internalizing compared to externalizing. Study 2 Results: The aim was to examine the role of sibling influence on problem behavior. Using a dyadic approach, bivariate analyses as well as actor-partner interdependence models (APIM) were conducted. Correlations suggest self-reported happiness with female caregiver is associated with externalizing behavior. Older siblings showed significant within group differences for externalizing problem behavior scores based on caregiver education level–caregivers with college degree or higher indicating the highest average externalizing scores relative to other education categories. No sibling/actor influences were noted in the API Models. Study 3 Results: The purpose of this study was to explore problem behavior among Indigenous youth using individual social convoy characteristics as predictors of externalizing behavior. Consistent with the extant literature, females, when compared to male counterparts, had significantly lower ...
format Text
author Ivanich, Jerreed D
author_facet Ivanich, Jerreed D
author_sort Ivanich, Jerreed D
title Understanding Mental and Behavioral Health of American Indian Youth: An Application of the Social Convoy Model
title_short Understanding Mental and Behavioral Health of American Indian Youth: An Application of the Social Convoy Model
title_full Understanding Mental and Behavioral Health of American Indian Youth: An Application of the Social Convoy Model
title_fullStr Understanding Mental and Behavioral Health of American Indian Youth: An Application of the Social Convoy Model
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Mental and Behavioral Health of American Indian Youth: An Application of the Social Convoy Model
title_sort understanding mental and behavioral health of american indian youth: an application of the social convoy model
publisher DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln
publishDate 2018
url https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/dissertations/AAI10980201
genre First Nations
Alaska
genre_facet First Nations
Alaska
op_source ETD collection for University of Nebraska-Lincoln
op_relation https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/dissertations/AAI10980201
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