‘This Tobacco Has Always Been Here for Us,’ American Indian Views of Smoking: Risk and Protective Factors

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2010-12
Authors
Momper, S.L.
Dennis, M.K.
Reed, B.G.
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Myron B. Thompson School of Social Work, University of Hawaii at Manoa
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We utilized eight talking circles to elicit American Indian views of smoking on a U.S. reservation. We report on (1) the historical context of tobacco use among Ojibwe Indians; (2) risk factors that facilitate use: peer/parental smoking, acceptability/availability of cigarettes; (3) cessation efforts/ inhibiting factors for cessation: smoking while pregnant, smoking to reduce stress , beliefs that cessation leads to debilitating withdrawals; and (4) protective factors that inhibit smoking initiation/use: negative health effects of smoking, parental and familial smoking behaviors, encouragement from youth to quit smoking, positive health benefits, “cold turkey” quitting, prohibition of smoking in tribal buildings/homes. Smoking is prevalent, but protective behaviors are evident and can assist in designing culturally sensitive prevention, intervention and cessation programs.
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American Indians, Native Americans, Indigenous, tobacco, smoking, community based research, Indigenous peoples--Periodicals., Social work with indigenous peoples--Periodicals.
Citation
Momper, S. L. (2010). ‘This Tobacco Has Always Been Here for Us,’ American Indian Views of Smoking: Risk and Protective Factor. Journal of Indigenous Voices in Social Work, 1(12.
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18 pages
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