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CHAPTER 4
Mental Health Care for American Indians and Alaska Natives
The Need for Mental Health Care
Historical and Sociocultural Factors That Relate to Mental Health
The history of American Indians and Alaska Natives sets the stage for understanding
their mental health needs. Past governmental policies regarding this
population have led to mistrust of many government services or care
provided by white practitioners. Attempts to eradicate Native culture,
including the forced separation of Indian and Native children from parents
in order to send them to boarding schools, have been associated with
negative mental health consequences (Kleinfeld, 1973; Kleinfeld &
Bloom, 1977). Some argue that, as a consequence of past separation from
their families, when these children become parents themselves, they
are not able to draw on experiences of growing up in a family to guide
their own parenting (Special Subcommittee on Indian Education, 1969).
The effect of boarding school education on American Indian students
remains controversial (Kunitz et al., 1999; Irwin & Roll, 1995).
The socioeconomic consequences of these historical policies are also telling.
The removal of American Indians from their lands, as well as other policies
summarized above, has resulted in the high rates of poverty that characterize
this ethnic minority group. One of the most robust scientific findings
has been the association of lower socioeconomic status with poor general
health and mental health. Widespread recognition that many Native people
live in stressful environments with potentially negative mental health
consequences has led to increasing study and empirical documentation
of this link (Manson, 1996b, 1997; Beals et al, under review; Jones
et al., 1997).
Key Issues for Understanding the Research
Because American Indians and Alaska Natives comprise such a small percentage
of U.S. citizens in general, nationally representative studies do not
generate sufficiently large samples of this special population to draw
accurate conclusions regarding their need for mental health care. Even
when large samples are acquired, findings are constrained by the marked
heterogeneity that characterizes the social and cultural ecologies of
Native people. There are 561 federally recognized tribes, with over
200 indigenous languages spoken (Fleming, 1992). Differences between
some of these languages are as distinct as those between English and
Chinese (Chafe, 1962). Similar differences abound among Native customs,
family structures, religions, and social relation-ships. The magnitude
of this diversity among Indian people has important implications for
research observations. Novins and colleagues provide an excellent illustration
of this point in a paper that shows that the dynamics underlying suicidal
ideation among Indian youth vary significantly with the cultural contexts
of the tribes of which they are members (Novins, et al., 1999). A tension
arises, then, between the frequently conflicting objectives of comparability
and cultural specificity—a tension not easily resolved in research
pursued among this special population.
As widely noted, language is important when assessing the mental health needs
of individuals and the communities in which they reside. Approximately
280,000 American Indians and Alaska Natives speak a language other than
English at home; more than half of Alaska Natives who are Eskimos speak
either Inuit or Yup’ik. Consequently, evaluations of need for
mental health care often have to be conducted in a language other than
English. Yet the challenge can be more subtle than that implied by stark
differences in language. Cultural differences in the expression and
reporting of distress are well established among American Indians and
Alaska Natives. These often compromise the ability of assessment tools
to capture the key signs and symptoms of mental illness (Kinzie &
Manson, 1987; Manson, 1994, 1996a). Words such as “depressed”
and “anxious” are absent from some American Indian and Alaska
Native languages (Manson et al., 1985). Other research has demonstrated
that certain DSM diagnoses, such as major depressive disorder, do not
correspond directly to the categories of illness recognized by some
American Indians. Thus, evaluating the need for mental health care among
American Indians and Alaska Natives requires careful clinical inquiry
that attends closely to culture.
Census 2000 reports a significant increase in the number of individuals who identify,
at least in part, as American Indian or Alaska Native. This finding
resurrects longstanding debates about definition and identification
(Passel, 1996). The relationship of those who have recently asserted
their Indian ancestry to other, tribally defined individuals is unknown
and poses a difficult challenge. It suggests a newly emergent need to
consider the mental health status and requirements of individuals who
live primarily within mainstream society, while continuing to build
the body of knowledge on groups already defined.
Mental Disorders
Although not all mental disorders are disabling, these disorders always manifest
some level of psychological discomfort and associated impairment. Such
symptoms often improve with treatment. Therefore, the presence of a
mental disorder is one reasonable indicator of need for mental health
care. As noted in previous chapters, in the United States such disorders
are identified according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
of Mental Disorders (DSM) diagnostic categories established
by the American Psychiatric Association (1994).
Adults
Unfortunately, no large-scale studies of the rates of mental disorders among
American Indian and Alaska Native adults have yet been published. The
discussion at this point must rely on smaller, suggestive studies that
await future confirmation.
The most recently published information regarding the mental health needs of
adult American Indians living in the community comes from a study conducted
in 1988 (Kinzie et al., 1992). The 131 respondents were inhabitants
of a small Northwest Coast village who had participated in a previous
community-based epidemiological study (Shore et al., 1973). They were
followed up 20 years later using a well accepted method for diagnosing
mental disorders, the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia-Lifetime
Version. Nearly 70 percent of the sample had experienced a mental disorder
in their lifetimes. About 30 percent were experiencing a disorder at
the time of the follow-up.
The American Indian Vietnam Veterans Project (AIVVP) is the most recent community-based,
diagnostically oriented psychiatric epidemiological study among American
Indian adults to be reported within the last 25 years (Beals et al.,
under review; Gurley et al., 2001; National Center for Post-Traumatic
Stress Disorder and the National Center for American Indian and Alaska
Native Mental Health Research [NCPTSD/NCAIANMHR], 1996). It was part
of a congressionally mandated effort to replicate the National Vietnam
Veterans Readjustment Study that had been conducted in other ethnic
groups (Kulka et al., 1990).
The AIVVP found that rates of PTSD among the Northern Plains and Southwestern
Vietnam veterans, respectively, were 31 percent and 27 percent, current;
57 percent and 45 percent, lifetime. These figures were significantly
higher than the rates for their white, black, and Japanese American
counterparts. Likewise, current and lifetime prevalence of alcohol abuse
and/or dependence among the Indian veterans (more than 70% current;
more than 80% lifetime) was far greater than that observed for the others,
which ranged from 11 to 32 percent current and 33 to 50 percent lifetime
(NCPTSD/NCAIANMHR, 1997).
There are no recent, scientifically rigorous studies that could shed light on
the need for mental health care among Alaska Natives. The only systematic
studies of Alaska Natives are outdated (Murphy & Hughes, 1965; Foulks
& Katz, 1973; Sampath, 1974) and not based on the current DSM system
of disorders. One study of Alaska Natives seen in a community mental
health center indicated that substance abuse is a common reason for
men (85% of those seen) and women (65% of those seen) to seek mental
health care (Aoun & Gregory, 1998).
Children and Youth
Two recent studies examined the need for mental health care among American Indian
youth. The Great Smoky Mountain Study assessed psychiatric disorders
among 431 youth ages 9 to 13 (Costello et al., 1997). Children were
defined as American Indian if they were enrolled in a recognized tribe
or were first- or second-generation descendants of an enrolled member.
Overall, American Indian children were found to have fairly similar
rates of disorder (17%) in comparison to white children from surrounding
counties (19%). Lower rates of tics (2 vs. 4%) and higher rates of substance
abuse or dependence (1 vs. 0.1%) were found in American Indian children
as compared with white children. The difference in substance abuse is
almost totally accounted for by alcohol use among 13-year-old Indian
children (Costello et al., 1997). Rates of anxiety disorders, depressive
disorders, conduct disorders, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
(AD/HD) were not significantly different for American Indian and white
children. Yet, for white children, poverty doubled the risk of mental
disorders, whereas poverty was not associated with increased risk of
mental disorders among the American Indian children. Overall, these
American Indian children appeared to experience rates of mental disorders
similar to those for white children.
The second study reported a followup of a school-based psychiatric epidemiological
study involving Northern Plains youth, 13 to 17 years of age (Beals
et al., 1997). Of 109 adolescents, 29 percent received a diagnosis of
at least one psychiatric disorder. Altogether, more than 15 percent
of the students qualified for a single diagnosis; 13 percent met criteria
for multiple diagnoses. In terms of the broad diagnostic categories,
6 percent of the sample met criteria for an anxiety disorder, 5 percent
for a mood disorder (either major depressive disorder or dysthymia),
14 for one or more of the disruptive behavior disorders, and 18 percent
for substance abuse disorders. Only 1 percent was diagnosed with an
eating disorder. The five most common specific disorders were alcohol
dependence or abuse (11%), attention- deficit/hyper-activity disorder
(11%), marijuana dependence or abuse (9%), major depressive disorder
(5%), and other sub-stance dependence or abuse (4%). Considerable comorbidity
among disorders was observed. More than half of those with a disruptive
behavior disorder also qualified for a substance use disorder. Similarly,
60 percent of those youth diagnosed with any depressive disorder had
a substance use disorder as well.
Beals and colleagues compared their findings with those reported for nonminority
children drawn from the population at large (Lewinsohn et al., 1993;
Shaffer et al., 1996). The American Indian youth were diagnosed with
fewer anxiety disorders than the nonminority children in the Shaffer
sample. However, American Indian adolescents were much more likely to
be diagnosed with AD/HD and substance abuse or substance dependence
disorders. The rates of conduct disorder and oppositional defiant disorder
were also elevated in the American Indian sample. Rates of depressive
disorders were essentially equivalent. This latter finding was consistent
with a study published in 1994 (Sack et al., 1994) that reported clinical
depression among youth from several reservations below 1 percent, “a
prevalence rate compatible with other studies in white populations,
which typically varies from 1 to 3 percent” (Fleming & Offord,
1990). When compared with the Lewinsohn sample, American Indian adolescents
in the study by Beals and colleagues demonstrated statistically significant
higher 6-month prevalence rates than did the nonminority children for
lifetime prevalence of ADHD and alcohol abuse/dependence. In addition,
the American Indian youth had higher 6-month rates of simple phobias,
social phobias, overanxious disorder, and oppositional defiant and conduct
disorders than the nonminority children’s lifetime rates for those
disorders.
At present, there are no published estimates of the rates of mental disorders
among Alaska Native youth. One study of Eskimo children seen in a community
mental health center in Nome, Alaska, indicated that sub-stance abuse,
including alcohol and inhalant use, and previous suicide attempts are
the most common types of problems for which these children receive mental
health care (Aoun & Gregory, 1998). An earlier study found a high
need for mental health care among Yup’ik and Cup’ik adolescents
who were in boarding schools (Kleinfeld & Bloom, 1977), but current
DSM diagnostic categories were not used.
Box 4–1: Charlie (age 9); Mike (father, age 29)
Charlie frequently argued with teachers and started fights with other
children. Charlie’s schoolteacher recommended him for counseling
because of his acting out in school.
Charlie had lived all his life with his mother and two younger siblings
on their Southwestern reservation. Charlie’s father, Mike, lived
in the home until Charlie was 3 years old, when he was sent to prison
for attempted murder of Charlie’s mother. Mike was a chronic
alcoholic who frequently battered his wife when their arguments became
heated. Charlie often witnessed violence between his mother and father
and was aware of the circumstances leading to his father’s imprisonment.
During Mike’s incarceration, Charlie visited him in prison and
maintained regular contact by mail and phone. At the time of Charlie’s
referral, Mike had been out of prison for one year and had just returned
home from a 30-day alcohol rehabilitation program.
Mike had been the youngest of eight children; his mother, the primary
caretaker, sent Mike away to boarding school because she was unable
to care for him. Mike never had contact with his father, whom he described
as “an alcoholic and a womanizer.” Although Mike recognized
the economic hardship his mother faced after his father left, he nonetheless
felt abandoned by her and frequently wondered why she had had him
in the first place.
Mike described boarding school as a constant struggle. On the weekends
and holidays, Mike rarely went home; his family did not visit him.
Over the years, Mike felt great sadness over his childhood loss and
great anger toward his mother for her complete abandonment of him.
In addition to being physically abusive toward his wife, Mike frequently
fought other men. He often felt great rage and was easily provoked
Mike was a talented artist who created pottery and woodwork designs
that were derived from traditional practices within his tribe. He
was a full-blooded member of his tribe. Though raised on the reservation,
he spent most of his life shuttling between it and various institutions,
such as boarding school, prison, and alcohol rehabilitation facilities.
In talking about his childhood, Mike was confused and incoherent,
especially about his parents. He sometimes needed to leave the therapeutic
setting because he had become so agitated by these feelings. Mike
was preoccupied with the sense that he had been dealt a bad lot in
life. This contributed to his quickness to see that others were betraying
him and thus needed to be dealt with swiftly and harshly without forgiveness.
At the time of Charlie’s referral, Mike was newly committed to being a
parent. Mike wanted to teach his children about his art and culture,
to play sports with them, and to guide them in ways that he had not
been guided. Mike acknowledged that the problems Charlie was having
were not unlike the problems he had as a child. He had not appreciated
the impact that the rage rooted in his own childhood experience of abandonment
had on Charlie’s development. In witnessing the violence that
his father let explode on his mother, Charlie had learned to fear his
father and to feel powerless to protect his mother. Charlie appears
to be making up for this powerlessness at home by dominating his peers
through his own acts of violence. (Adapted from Christensen &
Manson, 2001)
Older Adults
Although large-scale studies of mental disorders among older American Indians
are lacking, Manson (1992) found that over 30 percent of older American
Indian adults visiting one urban IHS outpatient medical facility reported
significant depressive symptoms; this rate is higher than most published
estimates of the prevalence of depression among older whites with chronic
illnesses (9 to 31%) (Berkman et al., 1986). In another clinic-based
investigation, nearly 20 percent of American Indian elders who received
primary care reported significant psychiatric symptoms (Goldwasser &
Badger, 1989), with rates increasing as a function of age. These findings
are consistent with a survey of older, community-dwelling, urban Natives
in Los Angeles, among whom more than 10 percent reported depression,
and an additional 20 percent reported sadness and grieving (Kramer,
1991).
A recent study of 309 Great Lakes American Indian elders revealed that 18 percent
of the sample scored above a traditional cutoff for depression on the
Center for Epidemiology Studies Depression Scale (CES–D) (Curyto
et al., 1998, 1999). However, upon further examination of that data,
the factor structure of the CES–D was found to be different in
this population as compared to available norms (Chapleski, Lamphere,
et al., 1997). Therefore, the concern remains that the CES–D may
not accurately measure depressive symptoms in this population. Nonetheless,
depressive symptoms were strongly associated with impaired functioning
(Chapleski, Lichtenberg, et al., 1997), which is in keeping with past
findings (Baron et al., 1990) and underscores the burden posed by such
distress, as well as the need for intervention (Manson & Brenneman,
1995).
Mental Health Problems
Symptoms
Although little is known about rates of psychiatric disorders among American
Indians and Alaska Natives in the United States, one recent, nationally
representative study looked at mental distress among a large sample
of adults (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1998). Overall,
American Indians and Alaska Natives reported much higher rates of frequent
distress—nearly 13 percent compared to nearly 9 percent in the
general population. The findings of this study suggest that American
Indians and Alaska Natives experience greater psychological distress
than the overall population.
Somatization
The distinction between mind and body common among individuals in industrialized
Western nations is not shared throughout the world (Manson & Kleinman,
1998; Manson, 2000). Many ethnic minorities do not discriminate bodily
from psychic distress and may express emotional distress in somatic
terms or bodily symptoms. Relatively little empirical research is available
concerning this tendency among American Indians and Alaska Natives.
However, a sample of 120 adult American Indians belonging to a single
Northwest Coast tribe was screened using the Center for Epidemiologic
Studies Depression Scale, which includes both psychological and somatic
symptoms. Analyses showed that somatic complaints and emotional distress
were not well differentiated from each other in this population (Somervell
et al., 1993). Other inquiries into the psychometric properties of the
CES–D and other measures of depressive symptoms among American
Indians have yielded similar findings, providing some evidence of the
lack of such distinctions within this population (Ackerson et al., 1990;
Manson et al., 1990).
Culture-Bound Syndromes
A large body of ethnographic work reveals that some American Indians and Alaska
Natives, who may express emotional distress in ways that are inconsistent
with the diagnostic categories of the DSM, may conceptualize mental
health differently. Many unique expressions of distress shown by American
Indians and Alaska Natives have been described (Trimble et al., 1984;
Manson et al., 1985; Manson 1994; Nelson & Manson, 2000). Prominent
examples include ghost sickness and heart-break syndrome
(Manson et al., 1985). The question becomes how to elicit, understand,
and incorporate such expressions of distress and suffering within the
assessment and treatment process of the DSM–IV.
Suicide
Given the lack of information about rates of mental disorders among American
Indian and Alaska Native populations, the prevalence of suicide often
serves as an important indicator of need. The Surgeon General’s
1999 Call to Action to Prevent Suicide indicates that from 1979
to 1992, the suicide rate for this ethnic minority group was 1.5 times
the national rate. The suicide rate is particularly high among young
Native American males ages 15 to 24. Accounting for 64 percent of all
suicides by American Indians and Alaska Natives, the suicide rate of
this group is 2 to 3 times higher than the general U.S. rate (May, 1990;
Kettle & Bixler, 1991; Mock et al., 1996). In another survey of
American Indian adolescents (n = 13,000), 22 percent of females and
12 percent of males reported having attempted suicide at some time;
67 per-cent who had made an attempt had done so within the past year
(Blum et al., 1992). Furthermore, an analysis of Bureau of Vital Statistics
death certificate data from 1979 to 1993 found that “Alaska Native
males had one of the highest documented suicide rates in the world”
(1997). Alaska Natives, in general, were more likely to commit suicide
than non-Natives living in Alaska (Gessner, 1997). It is important to
note that violent deaths (unintentional injuries, homicide, and suicide)
account for 75 percent of all mortality in the second decade of life
for American Indians and Alaska Natives (Resnick et al., 1997).
High-Need Populations
American Indians and Alaska Natives are the most impoverished ethnic minority
group in the United States. Although no causal links have yet been demonstrated,
there is good reason to suspect that the history of oppression, discrimination,
and removal from traditional lands experienced by Native people has
contributed to their current lack of educational and economic opportunities
and their significant representation among populations with high need
for mental health care.
Individuals Who Are Homeless
American Indians and Alaska Natives are overrepresented among people who are
homeless. Although they comprise less than 1 percent of the general
population, American Indians and Alaska Natives constitute 8 per-cent
of the U.S. homeless population (U.S. Census Bureau, 1999a). It is not
clear that homeless American Indians and Alaska Natives are at greater
risk of mental disorder than their non-Native counterparts. In one study,
American Indian veterans who were homeless had fewer psychiatric diagnoses
than did white veterans who were homeless (Kasprow & Rosenheck,
1998), although these differences were relatively small. Nevertheless,
because there are more individuals with mental disorders among the homeless
population than among the general population (Koegel et al., 1988),
this finding likely points to a substantial number of Native people
with a high need for mental health care.
Individuals Who Are Incarcerated
In 1997, an estimated 4 percent of racially identified American Indian and Alaska
Native adults were under the care, custody, or control of the criminal
justice system. Also, 16,000 adults in this group were held in local
jails (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 1999). Although research specific
to rates of mental disorders among American Indian and Alaska Native
adults in jails is not available, a recent study has evaluated disorders
among incarcerated adolescents. Rates of mental disorders among those
held in a Northern Plains reservation juvenile detention facility were
examined (Duclos et al., 1998). Among the 150 youth evaluated, nearly
half (49%) had at least one alcohol, drug, or mental health disorder.
The most common problems detected were substance abuse, conduct disorder,
and depression.
These rates were higher than those found in Indian adolescents in the community,
indicating that incarcerated American Indians are likely to be at high
need for mental health and substance abuse interventions.
Individuals with Alcohol and Drug Problems
Actual rates of alcohol abuse among American Indian adults are difficult to estimate,
yet indirect evidence suggests that a substantial proportion of this
population suffers from this problem. For example, the estimated rate
of alcohol-related deaths for Indian men is 27 percent and for Indian
women 13 percent (May & Moran, 1995). Rates appear to vary widely
among different tribes. Although the topic of substance abuse is beyond
the scope of this Supplement, alcohol problems and mental disorders
often occur together in American Indian and Alaska Native populations
(Westermeyer, 1982; Whittaker, 1982; Westermeyer & Peake, 1983;
Kinzie et al., 1992; Beals et al., 2001). A recent study, which sought
to understand the link between alcohol problems and psychiatric disorders
in American Indians, included over 600 members of three large families
(Robin et al., 1997a). More than 70 percent qualified for a lifetime
diagnosis of alcohol disorders. Among both men and women, those who
were alcohol-dependent were also more likely to have psychiatric disorders,
as were those who engaged in binge-drinking behavior. This finding underscores
the likelihood that American Indians with alcohol disorders are at high
risk for concomitant mental health problems.
Given the high rates of alcohol abuse among some American Indians and Alaska
Natives, fetal alcohol syndrome is an important influence on mental
health needs (May et al., 1983). The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (1998) monitored the rate of fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS),
identifying cases based on hospital discharge diagnoses collected from
more than 1,500 hospitals across the United States between 1980 and
1986. The overall rate of FAS was 2.97 per 1,000 for Native Americans,
0.6 per 1,000 for African Americans, 0.09 for Caucasians, 0.08 for Hispanics,
and 0.03 for Asians (Chavez et al., 1988). As might be expected given
the fact that physicians often do not identify this disease, these rates
are much lower than those found in clinic-based investigations (Stratton
et al., 1996). Fetal alcohol syndrome now is recognized as the leading
known cause of mental retardation in the United States (Streissguth
et al., 1991), surpassing Down’s syndrome and spina bifida. Fetal
alcohol syndrome is not just a childhood disorder; predictable long-term
progression of the disorder into adulthood includes maladaptive behaviors
such as poor judgment, distractibility, and difficulty perceiving social
cues. Consequently, American Indians and Alaska Natives with fetal alcohol
syndrome are likely to have high need for intervention to facilitate
the management of their disabilities.
Drinking by American Indian youth has been more thoroughly studied than drinking
by American Indian adults. Ongoing school-based surveys have shown that,
although about the same proportion of Indian and non-Indian youth in
grades 7 to 12 have tried alcohol, Indian youth who drink appear to
drink more heavily than do youth of other ethnicities (Plunkett &
Mitchell, 2000; Novins et al., under review). They also experience more
negative social consequences from their drinking than do their non-Indian
counterparts (Oetting et al., 1989; Mitchell et al., 1995). Although
drinking and mental disorders may be less linked for youth than for
adults, those adolescents with serious drinking problems are likely
to be at risk for mental health problems as well (Beals et al., 2001).
Individuals Exposed to Trauma
Lower socioeconomic status is associated with an increased likelihood of experiencing
undesirable life events (McLeod & Kessler, 1990). As a result of
lower socioeconomic status, American Indians and Alaska Natives are
also more likely to be exposed to trauma than members of more economically
advantaged groups. Exposure to trauma is related to the development
of sub-sequent mental disorders in general and of post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) in particular (Kessler et al., 1995). Recent evidence
suggests that American Indians may be at high risk for exposure to trauma.
An investigation of Northern Plains youth ages 8 to 11 found that 61 percent
of them had been exposed to some kind of traumatic event. These children
were reported to have more trauma-related symptoms, but not substantially
higher rates of diagnosable PTSD (3%) (Jones et. al., 1997). According
to the Bureau of Justice Statistics (1999), the rate of violent victimization
of American Indians is more than twice as high as the national average.
Indeed, the data regarding reported child abuse in Native communities
indicate that this phenomenon has increased 18 percent in the last 10
years (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 1999). Another study noted a high
prevalence of trauma exposure (e.g., car accidents, deaths, shootings,
beatings) and PTSD within those in the family study mentioned above
(Robin et al., 1997c). Of those studied, 82 percent had been exposed
to one traumatic event, and the prevalence of PTSD was 22 percent. Because
American Indians probably are similar to non-Indians in their likelihood
of developing PTSD after a traumatic exposure (Kessler et al., 1995),
the substantially higher prevalence of the disorder (22% for AI/AN vs.
8% in the general community) does not signal greater vulnerability to
PTSD, but rather higher rates of traumatic exposure.
Maltreatment and neglect have been shown to be relatively common among older
urban American Indian and Alaska Native patients in primary care. A
chart review of 550 Native adults 50 years of age or older seen at one
of the country’s largest, most comprehensive, urban Indian health
programs during one calendar year revealed that 10 percent met criteria
for definite and probable physical abuse or neglect (Buchwald et al.,
2000). After control-ling for other factors in a logistic regression
model, patient age, female gender, alcohol abuse, domestic violence,
and current depression remained significant correlates of physical abuse
or neglect of these Native elders.
The previously mentioned American Indian Vietnam Veterans Project (AIVVP) replicated
the National Vietnam Veterans Readjustment Study that examined psychiatric
disorders among African American, Latino, and white veterans (Kulka
et al., 1990). Between 1992 and 1995, researchers evaluated random samples
of Vietnam combat veterans drawn from three Northern Plains reservations
(n = 305) and one Southwest reservation (n = 316). Approximately one-third
of the Northern Plains (31%) and Southwestern (27%) American Indian
participants had PTSD at the time of the study. Approximately half had
experienced the disorder in their lifetimes (57% and 45%, respectively).
This rate is far in excess of rates of current PTSD for white veterans
(14%) and for black veterans (21%) (Kulka et al., 1990). The excess
rates, however, were largely attributable to the fact that American
Indian veterans had been exposed to more combat-related traumas than
their non-Indian peers (National Center for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
and the National Center for American Indian and Alaska Native Mental
Health Research, 1996; Beals et al., under review).
Box 4–2: John : Vietnam Combat Veteran (age 45)
John is a 45-year-old, full-blood Indian, who is married and has
7 children. The family lives in a small, rural community on a large
reservation in Arizona. John served as a Marine Corps infantry squad
leader in Vietnam during 1968–1969. He most recently was treated
through a VA medical program, where he participates in a post-traumatic
stress disorder (PTSD) support group. John suffers from alcoholism,
which began soon after his initial patrols in Vietnam. These involved
heavy combat and, ultimately, physical injury. He exhibits the hallmark
symptoms of PTSD, including flashbacks, nightmares, intrusive thoughts
on an almost daily basis, marked hypervigilance, irritability, and
avoidant behavior.
Some 10 years after his return from Vietnam, John began cycling through
several periods of treatment for his alcoholism in tribal residential
programs. It wasn’t until one month after he began treatment
for his alcoholism at a local VA facility that a provisional diagnosis
of PTSD was made. Upon completing that treatment, he transferred to
an inpatient unit specializing in combat-related trauma. John left
the unit against medical advice, sober but still experiencing significant
symptoms.
John speaks and understands English well; he also is fluent in his
native language, which is spoken in his home. John is the descendant
of a family of traditional healers. Consequently, the community expected
him to assume a leadership role in its cultural and spiritual life.
However, boarding school interrupted his early participation in important
aspects of local ceremonial life. His participation was further delayed
by military service and then fore-stalled by his alcoholism. During
boarding school, John was frequently harassed by non-Indian staff
for speaking his native language, for wearing his hair long, and for
running away. Afraid of similar ridicule while in the service, he
seldom shared his personal background with fellow infantrymen. Yet
John was the target of racism, from being selected to act as point
on patrol because he was an Indian to being called “Chief”
and “blanket ass.”
Until recently, tribal members had never heard of PTSD, but now frequently
refer to it as the “wounded spirit.” His community has
long recognized the consequences of being a warrior, and indeed, a
ceremony has evolved over many generations to prevent as well as treat
the underlying causes of these symptoms. Within this tribal worldview,
combat-related trauma upsets the balance that underpins someone’s
personal, physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual health. The events
in John’s life (the Vietnam war, his father’s death, and
his impairment due to PTSD and alcoholism) conspired to prevent his
participation in this and other tribal ceremonies.
John attends a VA-sponsored support group, comprised of all Indian
Vietnam veterans, which serves as an important substitute for the
circle of “Indian drinking buddies” from whom he eventually
separated as part of his successful alcohol treatment. John reports
having left the VA’s larger PTSD inpatient program because of
his discomfort with its non-Native styles of disclosure and expectations
regarding personal reflection. Through the VA’s Indian support
group, he joined a local gourd society that honors warriors and dances
prominently at pow-wows. His sobriety has been aided by involvement
in the Native American Church, with its reinforcement of his decision
to remain sober and its support for positive life changes.
Though John has a great deal of work ahead of him, he feels that he is now ready
to participate in the tribe’s major ceremonial intended to bless
and purify its warriors. His family, once alienated but now reunited,
is busily preparing for that event. (Adapted from Manson, 1996).
Children in Foster Care
Studies have consistently indicated that children who are removed from their
homes are at increased risk for mental health problems (e.g., Courtney
& Barth, 1996), as well as for serious subsequent adult problems
such as homelessness (Koegel et al., 1995). By the mid-1970s, many American
Indian children were experiencing out-of-home placements. In Oklahoma,
four times as many Indian children were either adopted or in foster
care as investigation that led to the passage of the act concluded non-Indian
children. In New Mexico, twice as many that “a pattern of discrimination
against American Indian children were in foster care than any other
minor-Indians is evident in the area of child welfare, and it is ity
group. Estimates suggest that as many as 25 to 30 the responsibility
of Congress to take whatever action is percent of American Indian children
have been removed within its power to see that Indian communities and
their from their families (Cross, et al., 2000). As a result, families
are not destroyed” (Fischler, 1985). Congress passed the Indian
Child Welfare Act in 1978 to Accordingly, in 1999, the number of American
Indian protect American Indian children. The Congressional and Alaska
Native children in foster care had decreased to 1 percent of all children
in foster care in the United States (DHHS, 1999). Yet the mental health
consequences for the children, now adults, who were placed out of their
homes, especially those placed in non-Indian homes, during this lengthy
period of mass cultural dislocation is not known (Nelson et al., 1996;
Roll, 1998).
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