A Comparison of COVID-19 Outcomes Between Reservation-Area American Indian and U.S. National Students

Introduction: This study presents data from 2 population-based surveys of youth (reservation-area American Indian adolescents and U.S. adolescents) on self, family, and friend morbidity and changes in substance use and negative impacts during COVID-19. Methods: Data were obtained in spring 2021 from...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Randall C. Swaim, PhD, Linda R. Stanley, PhD, Richard A. Miech, PhD, Megan E. Patrick, PhD, Meghan A. Crabtree, PhD, Mark A. Prince, PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-03-01
Series:AJPM Focus
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S277306542200044X
Description
Summary:Introduction: This study presents data from 2 population-based surveys of youth (reservation-area American Indian adolescents and U.S. adolescents) on self, family, and friend morbidity and changes in substance use and negative impacts during COVID-19. Methods: Data were obtained in spring 2021 from surveys of American Indian students living on or near reservations (8th grade, n=398; 10th grade, n=367; 12th grade, n=290) and national students from Monitoring the Future (8th grade, n=11,446; 10th grade, n=11,792; 12th grade, n=9,022). The main outcomes were COVID-19 testing, perceived morbidity/mortality, substance-use changes, and emotional changes during COVID-19. Results: The American Indian sample had a greater proportion of testing (e.g., American Indian 8th grade: 58.1% [95% CI=48.6, 68.8]; Monitoring the Future 8th grade: 43.6% [95% CI=39.8, 47.5]) and friend/family hospitalization (e.g., American Indian 8th grade: 36.2% [95% CI=26.2, 47.5]; Monitoring the Future 8th grade: 11.9% [95% CI=10.6, 13.3]). Across grades, greater proportions of the national sample reported increased anxiety, anger, boredom, loneliness, depression, worry, and trouble concentrating, whereas greater proportions of reservation-area American Indians reported decreased anxiety, loneliness, and depression. Conclusions: Findings indicate that reservation-area American Indian youth experienced unique health consequences 1 year into the COVID-19 pandemic compared with national students, illustrating the need for American Indian‒specific COVID-19 public health monitoring and response.
ISSN:2773-0654