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Exploring the Intersected Influences of Sociocultural Norms and the Social Context on Alcohol and Substance Abuse in Hispanic Men

机译:社会文化规范和社会背景对西班牙裔男子酗酒和滥用药物的交叉影响

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BACKGROUND: Maladaptive patterns of alcohol consumption can lead to clinically significant impairment or distress and have been established as a partial cause of a wide variety of health conditions, including neuropsychiatric disorders, cardiovascular diseases, hepatic inflammations, certain cancers, and infectious diseases. In the United States, Hispanic and non-Hispanic white (NHW) men have comparable rates of moderate alcohol consumption, however, Hispanic men are more likely to consume higher volumes of alcohol and with more frequency and experience disproportionate levels of adverse health and social consequences of alcohol abuse when compared to NHW men. Further, Hispanic men face greater barriers than NHW men in accessing, engaging, and completing alcohol abuse treatment services despite the contrasting burden of alcohol-related consequences they face.;OBJECTIVES: This dissertation is composed from three studies addressing the following aims to: 1) synthesize the culturally- and gender-responsive components of alcohol and substance abuse and dependence treatment programs designed for Hispanic males in the United States; 2) explore Hispanic male perspectives and opinions regarding alcohol use and abuse patterns that may lead to disparate rates of alcohol abuse in Hispanic males in the United States; and 3) examine U.S. Hispanic male perspectives regarding the barriers to alcohol abuse treatment-seeking related behaviors that lead to disparate treatment engagement and completion rates.;METHODS: A systematic literature search was conducted for Aim 1 in which articles reporting on culturally- and/or gender-adapted alcohol and/or substance abuse interventions designed exclusively for Hispanic males were identified. Aim 2 and Aim 3 used semi-structured interviews to elicit Hispanic male perspectives of alcohol abuse and alcohol abuse treatment seeking behaviors. Separate thematic analyses were conducted as per the objectives of Aims 2 and 3. Data analysis was based on a deductive process including a preliminary codebook that was supplemented with inductive codes that surfaced during iterative thematic analyses.;RESULTS: Regarding Aim 1, literature searches yielded 2685 titles, resulting in 12 articles that fit the parameters of the review. The most scientifically rigorous findings suggest that cultural adaptations may outperform standard treatment for Hispanic men (n=6). Nevertheless, a fraction of the included interventions (n=4) did not improve outcomes compared to standard treatment. Considering the scarce number of publications, it is difficult to discern how much null findings reflect ineffective interventions or methodological limitations. Findings for Aim 2 indicate that there are intersected effects of machismo, a culture of normalized overconsumption, social context stressors, and poor coping strategies that may influence maladaptive relationships with alcohol use. Findings for Aim 3 suggest that treatment seeking behaviors are highly influenced by; a) structural factors related to treatment accessibility, and linguistic and cultural-responsiveness of available treatment, b) sociocultural factors related to difficulties problematizing alcohol abuse due to lack of knowledge and cultural normalization of consumption, and societal stigmatization of alcohol abuse treatment, and c) individual factors related to machismo-bound pride as well as lack of knowledge.;CONCLUSIONS: Given the rapid expansion of the Hispanic population in the United States, and the parallel growth of alcohol abuse implications in this population, it is imperative that we learn where these problems may be rooted to better understand how to diminish the existing gaps. Collectively, these findings point to the need for treatment providers to disseminate accurate information about treatment availability and eligibility, and the treatment process. This work also illustrates the need to for consciousness building efforts targeting the Hispanic male community regarding the detrimental effects of alcohol-related problems and treatment, in order to diminish the stigma. Increased or redistributed funding for linguistically and culturally responsive programs is also needed in communities with large Hispanic populations in order to meet the growing demand, particularly for the uninsured. Further research is needed to identify other potential barriers and recovery resources for this population and other Hispanic subgroups in other parts of the United States.
机译:背景:饮酒的不良适应方式可导致临床上明显的损伤或困扰,并已被确定为多种健康状况的部分原因,包括神经精神疾病,心血管疾病,肝炎,某些癌症和传染病。在美国,西班牙裔男子和非西班牙裔白人(NHW)的中度饮酒率相当,但是,西班牙裔男子更容易饮酒,而且饮酒的频率更高,并且对健康和社会后果的不良影响不成比例与NHW男性相比,酒精滥用的比例更高。此外,尽管他们面临着与酒精相关的后果的重担,但他们在获得,参与和完成酗酒治疗服务方面比NHW男性面临更大的障碍。;目标:本论文由三项研究组成,旨在实现以下目标:1 )综合针对美国拉美裔男性设计的酒精和毒品滥用与依赖性治疗计划的文化和性别敏感成分; 2)探索关于酒精使用和滥用方式的西班牙裔男性观点和见解,这些观点和观点可能会导致美国西班牙裔男性中酗酒的比例不同; 3)研究美国裔西班牙裔男性对寻求药物滥用相关障碍的行为会导致不同的治疗参与和完成率的看法。;方法:针对目标1进行了系统的文献检索,其中报道了有关文化和/或文化的文章或专为西班牙裔男性设计的适应性别的酒精和/或药物滥用干预措施。目标2和目标3使用半结构化访谈来得出西班牙裔男性对酗酒和酗酒寻求行为的看法。根据目标2和3的目标进行了单独的主题分析。数据分析基于演绎过程,包括一个初步的密码本,并辅以在迭代主题分析过程中浮出水面的归纳代码。;结果:关于目标1,进行了文献检索共有2685个标题,共有12条符合评价参数的文章。最严格的科学发现表明,文化适应性可能胜过西班牙裔男性的标准治疗(n = 6)。尽管如此,与标准治疗相比,纳入的干预措施中只有一小部分(n = 4)并未改善预后。考虑到出版物数量稀少,很难辨别多少无效结果反映出无效的干预措施或方法学局限性。目标2的发现表明,大男子主义,正常化的过度消费文化,社交情境压力源和不良的应对策略会产生交叉影响,这可能会影响与饮酒的不良适应关系。目标3的发现表明,寻求治疗的行为受到以下因素的极大影响; a)与可获得治疗的方法有关的结构性因素,以及可获得治疗的语言和文化响应能力; b)与因缺乏知识和消费的文化规范化导致的酗酒问题难以解决有关的社会文化因素以及酗酒治疗的社会污名化有关; c )与受大男子主义约束的自尊心以及缺乏知识有关的个人因素。;结论:鉴于美国西班牙裔人口的快速增长,以及酗酒对该人口的平行增长,我们必须了解这些问题可能植根于更好地了解如何缩小现有差距的地方。这些发现共同表明,治疗提供者需要传播有关治疗可及性,资格以及治疗过程的准确信息。这项工作还表明,有必要针对西班牙裔男性社区进行有关酒精相关问题和治疗的有害影响的意识建设工作,以减少耻辱感。在西班牙裔人口众多的社区中,还需要增加或重新分配用于语言和文化响应计划的资金,以满足日益增长的需求,特别是对未投保者的需求。需要进一步的研究来确定美国其他地区的人口和其他西班牙裔亚人群的其他潜在障碍和康复资源。

著录项

  • 作者

    Valdez, Luis A.;

  • 作者单位

    The University of Arizona.;

  • 授予单位 The University of Arizona.;
  • 学科 Public health.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2017
  • 页码 180 p.
  • 总页数 180
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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