Interpersonal Violence in the Lives of Urban American Indian and Alaska Native Women: Implications for Health, Mental Health, and Help-Seeking
- 1 August 2006
- journal article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 96 (8), 1416-1422
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2004.054213
Abstract
Objective. We surveyed American Indian/Alaska Native (AIAN) women in New York City to determine the prevalence of 3 types of interpersonal violence among urban AIAN women and the behavioral health and mental health factors associated with this violence. Methods. Using a survey, we questioned 112 adult AIAN women in New York City about their experiences with interpersonal violence, mental health, HIV risk behaviors, and help-seeking. The sampling plan utilized a multiple-wave approach with modified respondent-driven sampling, chain referral, and target sampling. Results. Among respondents, over 65% had experienced some form of interpersonal violence, of which 28% reported childhood physical abuse, 48% reported rape, 40% reported a history of domestic violence, and 40% reported multiple victimization experiences. Overwhelmingly, women experienced high levels of emotional trauma related to these events. A history of interpersonal violence was associated with depression, dysphoria, help-seeking behaviors, and an increase in high–HIV risk sexual behaviors. Conclusions. AIAN women experience high rates of interpersonal violence and trauma that are associated with a host of health problems and have important implications for health and mental health professionals.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Social Epidemiology of Trauma Among 2 American Indian Reservation PopulationsAmerican Journal of Public Health, 2005
- Use of Biomedical Services and Traditional Healing Options Among American IndiansMedical Care, 2004
- “A little encouragement”: health services and domestic violenceInternational Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance, 2001
- Physical Health Consequences of Physical and Psychological Intimate Partner ViolenceArchives of Family Medicine, 2000
- Patterns and Predictors of HIV Risk Among Urban American IndiansAmerican Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research, 2000
- How Health Care Providers Help Battered Women: The Survivor's PerspectiveWomen & Health, 1999
- Respondent-Driven Sampling: A New Approach to the Study of Hidden PopulationsSocial Problems, 1997
- Health Impact of Interpersonal Violence 2: Medical and Mental Health OutcomesBehavioral Medicine, 1997
- Safe at Home? Domestic Violence and Other Homicides Among Women in New MexicoAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1996
- Alchohol Abuse in Urban Indian Adolescents and Women: A Longitudinal Study for Assessment and Risk EvaluationAmerican Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research, 1996