AI Article Synopsis

  • * The paper examines how historical trauma related to their environment influences tribal members' perceptions and behaviors concerning cardiovascular health, leading to feelings of ambivalence toward healthy habits.
  • * Tribal narratives suggest that by revitalizing and adapting traditional cultural practices, AI/AN communities can create effective health promotion strategies that empower them to combat cardiovascular disease without external imposition.

Article Abstract

Cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death among American Indians and Alaska Natives (AI/AN). Utilizing narratives from members of a Pacific Northwest tribe, this paper explores perceptions about behaviors affecting cardiovascular health through tribal members' lived experiences related to place-based environmental historical trauma. Findings from narrative analysis indicate that ambivalence is an effect of historical trauma and complicates the adoption of protective cardiovascular health behaviors. Tribal narratives indicate a path to overcome this ambivalence stemming from historical environmental trauma through revitalization, adaptation, and re-integration of traditional cultural practices to contemporary contexts. By creating their own health promotion response, one that is not imposed or colonizing, tribal members are re-generating cultural practices and health behaviors associated with lowered risks of cardiovascular disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.5820/aian.2502.2018.103DOI Listing

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