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Mental health, family functioning, and sleep in cultural context among American Indian/Alaska Native urban youth: A mixed methods analysis

Mental health problems contribute significantly to the global burden of disease. Driven in part by family stressors and insufficient sleep, mental health disproportionately affects low SES urban adolescents. In the United States, American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) youth exhibit excessively high r...

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Published in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2022-01, Vol.292, p.114582-114582, Article 114582
Main Authors: Palimaru, Alina I., Dong, Lu, Brown, Ryan A., D'Amico, Elizabeth J., Dickerson, Daniel L., Johnson, Carrie L., Troxel, Wendy M.
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description Mental health problems contribute significantly to the global burden of disease. Driven in part by family stressors and insufficient sleep, mental health disproportionately affects low SES urban adolescents. In the United States, American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) youth exhibit excessively high rates of mental health problems. Family functioning is strongly associated with adolescent mental health, and sleep problems may serve as a pathway between family functioning and mental health. Using mixed methods we examine the associations among family functioning, subjective- and actigraphy-measured sleep, mental health (depressive and anxiety symptoms), and cultural identity in a sample of urban AI/AN youth. All participants (N = 142) completed surveys; a random subsample (n = 26) completed qualitative interviews to assess family and cultural dynamics related to sleep, which informed hypothesized direct and indirect effects that were tested using survey data. Narratives identified mechanisms of family cohesion (e.g., daily interactions that build perceived family togetherness and family-centered traditional activities) and the role that family cohesion plays in sleep (e.g., ensuring stability of sleep environments). Path analysis showed direct effects of improved family functioning on fewer depressive and anxiety symptoms, and indirect effects through lower self-reported sleep disturbance (but not through greater actigraphy-measured sleep duration or efficiency). Cultural identity did not moderate effects in quantitative tests. Our findings illustrate the complex associations among family functioning, sleep, and mental health in AI/AN youth. Family-based interventions to improve adolescent mental health should address modifiable intervention targets such as sleep, and address sources of both risk and resilience relevant to urban AI/AN families, including extended family and cultural practices. •Narratives show family cohesion through family traditional practice.•Narratives show role family cohesion plays in sleep, e.g., stable sleep environment.•Better family functioning had direct effect on less depression and anxiety.•Better family functioning had indirect effects through lower sleep disturbance.•Cultural identity was not a significant moderator in the tested pathways.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114582
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); ScienceDirect Freedom Collection 2022-2024; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Actigraphy
Adolescent
Adolescents
Alaska Natives
American Indian or Alaska Native
American Indians
Anxiety
Child & adolescent mental health
Cultural identity
Extended family
Families & family life
Family
Family cohesion
Family Health
Family relations
Health problems
Humans
Indians, North American - psychology
Indigenous peoples
Indirect effects
Intervention
Mental depression
Mental disorders
Mental Health
Mental health services
Mixed methods
Mixed methods research
Native American
Path analysis
Polls & surveys
Research methodology
Resilience
Sleep
Sleep disorders
Sociocultural factors
Socioeconomic status
Stress
Symptoms
United States - epidemiology
Urban
Urban areas
Youth
title Mental health, family functioning, and sleep in cultural context among American Indian/Alaska Native urban youth: A mixed methods analysis
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