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Native Communities: Alcohol Intervention Review (NativeAIR)

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Motivational Interviewing and Culture for Urban Native American Youth (MICUNAY)

Adding motivational interviewing and cultural practices to attendance at community wellness gatherings for urban Native adolescents.

Motivational Interviewing and Culture for Urban Native American Youth (MICUNAY) is a culturally centered intervention addressing alcohol and other drug use among Native adolescents. It combines motivational interviewing (MI) and “pan-Indian” cultural practice components to deliver information regarding alcohol and other drug use and hands-on learning of traditional practices. Adolescents completed a baseline survey, were assigned by block randomization to at least one monthly community wellness group alone or in combination with the MICUNAY intervention, and were followed up 3 and 6 months later.

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Native American weavers

Outcomes

No Change

Exposure to cultural activities may protect against increased substance use, but MICUNAY provided no additional benefit.

Both substance use and intent to use remained relatively stable over the study period, and there was no significant difference between the two groups at follow-up.

Costs

Start-Up Cost
Medium
Ongoing Cost
Medium

Medium costs for personnel to deliver intervention, supplies, and facilities.

Costs include hiring and training MICUNAY facilitators, compensation to Elders for facilitating community wellness group events, food and facility costs, supplies for traditional cultural activities.

Cultural Engagment

Cultural Inclusion
High
Tribal Inclusion
High

Participants

Adolescent; Native; Female, Male

Setting

Community Center, Urban

Delivery

Small Group, Medium Group, Face-to-Face

Urban dwelling adolescents participated in community-based settings.

A total of 185 adolescents (ages 14–18 years; 81% Native; 51% female) participated in urban community settings.

Staffing Needs

Community Member

The community wellness groups were facilitated by Elders; the MICUNAY sessions were conducted by community members.

Community Elders facilitated the community wellness group events. Native community members, ranging in education from high school graduate to master’s degree, conducted MICUNAY workshops after receiving training in MI.

Research Design

Randomized controlled experimental design

Developmental stage of research

Mid Stage

Acceptability of MICUNAY was demonstrated, but clear efficacy above the community wellness groups was not.

Rates of alcohol and other drug use did not increase with time as may be typical among youth of this age. The study was limited by the lack of a no-treatment control group, the possible effect of differentially recruiting youth who were already engaged in cultural activities, and considerable loss to follow-up.

Potential

MICUNAY may be protective against increasing substance use.

MICUNAY is highly transportable, acceptable to youth, brief, and relatively low-cost to implement. Results suggest that connecting urban AI/AN adolescents to culturally centered activities and resources may be protective.

References

Primary

D’Amico EJ, Dickerson DL, Brown RA, Johnson CL, Klein DJ, Agniel D. Motivational interviewing and culture for urban Native American youth (MICUNAY): A randomized controlled trial. J Subst Abuse Treat. 2020;111:86-99. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32087841. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsat.2019.12.011.

Associated

Dickerson DL, Brown RA, Johnson CL, Schweigman K, D'Amico EJ. Integrating motivational interviewing and traditional practices to address alcohol and drug use among urban American Indian/Alaska Native youth. J Subst Abuse Treat. 2016;65:26-35. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26306776. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsat.2015.06.023.

Recommended Reading

Brown RA, Dickerson DL, D'Amico E J. Cultural identity among urban American Indian/Alaska Native youth: Implications for alcohol and drug use. Prev Sci. 2016;17(7):852-861. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5030149. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11121-016-0680-1.

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