Culture in treatment, culture as treatment. A critical appraisal of developments in addictions programs for indigenous North Americans and Australians.
about
Cultural interventions to treat addictions in Indigenous populations: findings from a scoping studyKnowledge, attitudes, and substance use practices among street children in Western KenyaIndigenous perspectives on active living in remote Australia: a qualitative exploration of the socio-cultural link between health, the environment and economics.Healthy country: healthy people? Exploring the health benefits of indigenous natural resource management.A review of 'traditional' aboriginal health beliefs.Cultural relativism: occupation and independence reconsidered.Ethnic pride, biculturalism, and drug use norms of urban American Indian adolescentsQualitative research: contributions to the study of drug use, drug abuse, and drug use(r)-related interventions.A latent class analysis of urban American Indian youth identities.Listening to native patients. Changes in physicians' understanding and behaviour.Exploring Indigenous Identities of Urban American Indian Youth of the Southwest.Delivering culturally appropriate residential rehabilitation for urban Indigenous Australians: a review of the challenges and opportunities.Transformative and restorative processes: revisiting the question of efficacy of indigenous healing.Culturally-Informed Interventions for Substance Abuse Among Indigenous Youth in the United States: A Review.Alaska Native Elders in Recovery: Linkages between Indigenous Cultural Generativity and Sobriety to Promote Successful Aging.Substance misuse in Aboriginal Australians.Substance use and socio-demographic factors among aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander school students in New South Wales.Clients' perceptions of opioid substitution treatment: an input to improving the quality of treatment.Age of onset of first alcohol intoxication and subsequent alcohol use among urban American Indian adolescents.Use of Traditional Healing Practices in Two Ontario First Nations.Healing history? Aboriginal healing, historical trauma, and personal responsibility.Illicit and injecting drug use among Indigenous young people in urban, regional and remote Australia.Re-enculturation: culturally congruent interventions for Mäori with alcohol- and drug-use-associated problems in New Zealand.The influence of professional values on the implementation of Aboriginal health policy.Spirituality and religion in response to substance misuse among indigenous Australians.Brain injury from a first nations' perspective: teachings from elders and traditional healers."I just feel comfortable out here, there's something about the place": staff and client perceptions of a remote Australian Aboriginal drug and alcohol rehabilitation service.The development of a healing model of care for an Indigenous drug and alcohol residential rehabilitation service: a community-based participatory research approach.Indigenous traditional knowledge and substance abuse treatment outcomes: the problem of efficacy evaluation.Religious and spiritual elements of change in Sikh men with alcohol problems: a qualitative exploration.American Indian culture as substance abuse treatment: pursuing evidence for a local intervention.Rethinking cultural competence: insights from indigenous community treatment settings.The red road to wellness: cultural reclamation in a Native First Nations community treatment center.Understanding remote Aboriginal drug and alcohol residential rehabilitation clients: Who attends, who leaves and who stays?In the shadow of the temple: cross-cultural sensitivity in international health program development.Optimal treatment for Maori with alcohol and drug-use-related problems: an investigation of cultural factors in treatment.Redressing First Nations historical trauma: theorizing mechanisms for indigenous culture as mental health treatment.Reasons behind Greek problem drug users’ decisions to quit using drugs and engage in treatment of their own volition: sense of self and the Greek filotimo.Impacts of alcohol availability on Tribal lands where alcohol is prohibited: A community-partnered qualitative investigation.Substance abuse treatment provider views of "culture": implications for behavioral health care in rural settings.
P2860
Q27023942-7F8481A8-013F-4FEF-B4AC-0D9762C045E4Q28681677-344D90FD-82D6-4257-BAE0-A3FA819BFE84Q30393756-DBFF2B3F-2DA0-4ABF-936D-DCC6EE826C20Q33215802-388B51CA-D737-4500-AE50-237011302634Q33872688-24AE6406-C7AC-4BCF-8F0F-7EC96E2D449AQ34119675-48579EA8-FA89-4B7C-B7DC-85184387AA81Q34635311-CD111042-E935-44DA-AFAE-36C3181D6C33Q35978380-47DD8E29-E94C-43B9-9106-5919103236AAQ36189878-CF0CFD53-A1EF-4DE5-9CE3-C7181E5C7C2CQ36405582-6E89087D-EBB7-40E2-98E1-21A44AD33FBCQ36916605-867B6C27-D6E3-4928-84D7-95F019287BA1Q37771367-FAD8B87F-98DB-4C04-96FE-583155C62AAEQ38565717-3B2F45D5-0F52-469E-9B80-CEEEB09508EAQ38669353-09E975AD-5775-4422-A1E8-A8652F33E056Q38686912-EE03F4F3-DD87-4029-88CC-5E7FC3BC57C3Q38688261-19247BDE-FA72-40CA-B421-84E5562E72C7Q39511544-CFBFDA35-E6AD-4E3C-BB43-9FCA0208B50AQ39620516-4E2E1C0E-17FE-4779-8748-55D8E1E3FDD4Q39966958-48C0BF1F-C54A-4A26-B945-1EFD4C75A555Q40061754-029DD473-BF53-46F2-A651-0589298E3817Q40119119-38C9DACB-209E-4178-99F2-00AD14C1442CQ40313405-8131C892-C518-4DDD-B98D-30FADC9AFB93Q44103413-B1847C8F-DDC1-4892-A297-7B7CA043FA5EQ44214425-6A7C51CE-4F49-45DD-80C7-4C9CE56382E0Q44469231-C05EF06C-F4D6-4366-A543-1F9285631EA2Q44557577-9569A7E7-E0F1-4706-8BC2-5555F6483A03Q47120222-5CDFBC23-3BBD-4269-823D-4393D2AA7D8CQ47168291-07B3C33B-C0CF-4EBF-8932-62A344AE1057Q47180302-EF2B27BC-B0FC-4629-9375-09AEBEBD7723Q47209808-E71FCED4-D2BF-485C-8583-25A53CB19002Q47219438-B2B4A230-9720-44B0-A3B1-2DC6823A7ADBQ47239966-5597B19B-F582-4E7A-A651-F0CE36D3CA0CQ47346311-388AC515-A155-4388-8A8D-F2D18BCC26DCQ47554188-79C49EB7-B18F-4C4A-8469-78C7B3A89D11Q47660908-D0B3219D-C6E6-4573-B1CE-20B592EDAC5AQ47681890-966AA56C-B16E-4268-B717-16875D60F3A2Q47753832-AB729DEF-0CE1-44B1-BD74-C0875A2914F0Q47777604-5FC13915-1737-41F1-BA07-03CAD3E3CF62Q50135161-2B604482-7B28-4A9E-B87F-DFD901D7857AQ51897885-122D8A44-FAFD-48DF-8515-7A25A0EDFABD
P2860
Culture in treatment, culture as treatment. A critical appraisal of developments in addictions programs for indigenous North Americans and Australians.
description
1995 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1995年の論文
@ja
1995年論文
@yue
1995年論文
@zh-hant
1995年論文
@zh-hk
1995年論文
@zh-mo
1995年論文
@zh-tw
1995年论文
@wuu
1995年论文
@zh
1995年论文
@zh-cn
name
Culture in treatment, culture ...... rth Americans and Australians.
@en
type
label
Culture in treatment, culture ...... rth Americans and Australians.
@en
prefLabel
Culture in treatment, culture ...... rth Americans and Australians.
@en
P1476
Culture in treatment, culture ...... rth Americans and Australians.
@en
P2093
P304
P356
10.1016/0277-9536(95)00055-C
P407
P577
1995-12-01T00:00:00Z