8 results on '"Rhodes, Kristine L."'
Search Results
2. Designing and evaluating culturally specific smoking cessation interventions for American Indian communities.
- Author
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Fu, Steven S, Rhodes, Kristine L, Robert, Christina, Widome, Rachel, Forster, Jean L, and Joseph, Anne M
- Abstract
Introduction: American Indians have the highest smoking rates in the United States, yet few randomized controlled trials of culturally specific interventions exist. This study assessed American Indians' opinions about evidence-based treatment and attitudes toward participating in clinical trials.Methods: Six focus groups were conducted based on smoking status (current/former smoker), sex, and elder status (55 years and older or younger). Meetings were held at local American Indian community organizations. This project was accomplished in partnership with the American Indian Community Tobacco Projects, a community-academic research partnership at the University of Minnesota. Thematic qualitative data analyses were conducted.Results: Participants desired the following: (a) programs led by trained American Indian community members, (b) the opportunity to connect with other American Indian smokers interested in quitting, and (c) programs promoting healthy lifestyles. Strategies desired for treatment included (a) free pharmacotherapy, including nicotine replacement therapy (NRT); (b) nominal incentives, e.g., gift cards for groceries; and (c) culturally specific program components such as American Indian images, education on traditional tobacco use, and quit-smoking messages that target the value of family and include narratives or story telling in recruitment and program materials. Biochemical verification of smoking abstinence, such as salivary cotinine or carbon monoxide breathalyzers, is likely acceptable. Standard treatment or delayed treatment control groups were viewed as potentially acceptable for randomized study designs.Conclusions: Rigorously conducted randomized controlled trials of culturally specific smoking cessation interventions are sorely needed but will only be accomplished with the commitment of funders, researchers, and collaborative trusting relationships with the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Designing and Evaluating Culturally Specific Smoking Cessation Interventions for American Indian Communities.
- Author
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Fu, Steven S., Rhodes, Kristine L., Robert, Christina, Widome, Rachel, Forster, Jean L., and Joseph, Anne M.
- Subjects
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SMOKING , *CLINICAL trials , *CIGARETTE smokers , *INDIGENOUS peoples of the Americas , *TOBACCO use - Abstract
Introduction: American Indians have the highest smoking rates in the United States, yet few randomized controlled trials of culturally specific interventions exist. This study assessed American Indians’ opinions about evidence-based treatment and attitudes toward participating in clinical trials. Methods: Six focus groups were conducted based on smoking status (current/former smoker), sex, and elder status (55 years and older or younger). Meetings were held at local American Indian community organizations. This project was accomplished in partnership with the American Indian Community Tobacco Projects, a community–academic research partnership at the University of Minnesota. Thematic qualitative data analyses were conducted. Results: Participants desired the following: (a) programs led by trained American Indian community members, (b) the opportunity to connect with other American Indian smokers interested in quitting, and (c) programs promoting healthy lifestyles. Strategies desired for treatment included (a) free pharmacotherapy, including nicotine replacement therapy (NRT); (b) nominal incentives, e.g., gift cards for groceries; and (c) culturally specific program components such as American Indian images, education on traditional tobacco use, and quit-smoking messages that target the value of family and include narratives or story telling in recruitment and program materials. Biochemical verification of smoking abstinence, such as salivary cotinine or carbon monoxide breathalyzers, is likely acceptable. Standard treatment or delayed treatment control groups were viewed as potentially acceptable for randomized study designs. Conclusions: Rigorously conducted randomized controlled trials of culturally specific smoking cessation interventions are sorely needed but will only be accomplished with the commitment of funders, researchers, and collaborative trusting relationships with the community. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
4. American Indian Breastfeeding Attitudes and Practices in Minnesota.
- Author
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Rhodes, Kristine L., Hellerstedt, Wendy L., Davey, Cynthia S., Pirie, Phyllis L., and Daly, Kathleen A.
- Subjects
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BREASTFEEDING , *NATIVE Americans , *PRENATAL care , *POSTNATAL care , *CIGARETTE smokers , *WOMEN'S health , *CIGARETTES , *SOCIAL support - Abstract
Objectives We examined the breastfeeding attitudes and practices in an American Indian population in Minnesota. Methods We interviewed women prenatally ( n = 380), at 2-weeks ( n = 342) and at 6-months postpartum ( n = 256). We conducted multivariable analyses to examine the demographic, behavioral, and attitudinal correlates of breastfeeding initiation and duration. Results Factors positively associated with breastfeeding initiation included positive breastfeeding attitudes and social support for breastfeeding from the woman’s husband/boyfriend and her mother. Factors positively associated with breastfeeding at 2-weeks postpartum were support from the woman’s mother and positive attitudes about breastfeeding. The prenatal use of traditional American Indian medicines and cigarette smoking were both significantly associated with breastfeeding at 6-months postpartum. Conclusions Programs to encourage breastfeeding in American Indian communities may be strengthened with protocols to encourage social support, recognition of the perceived health, developmental, and practical benefits of breastfeeding, and a focus on traditional American Indian health practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Patterns of tobacco use in a sample of American Indians in Minneapolis-St. Paul.
- Author
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Forster, Jean L., Rhodes, Kristine L., Poupart, John, Baker, Lannesse O., and Davey, Cynthia
- Subjects
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TOBACCO use , *NATIVE Americans , *SMOKING cessation , *CIGARETTE smokers , *PARTICIPANT observation - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to identify patterns of tobacco initiation, current use, and smoking cessation and their correlates in the adult American Indian population in the Twin Cities, using community-based participatory research methods. A total of 300 American Indians aged 18 years or older participated in in-person interviews. Participants were recruited to fill age-gender quotas that reflect the demographic distribution of American Indians in Minnesota. Almost everyone in this sample had smoked cigarettes recreationally: Only 12% had smoked fewer than 100 cigarettes, and nearly two-thirds (62%) reported that they were current smokers. Only 29% of ever-smokers had quit smoking. More than two-thirds (68%) of current smokers would like to quit, and most of them (53% of all smokers) had tried unsuccessfully to quit in the previous 12 months. Our results show a level of current smoking and low cessation rates among American Indians in the Twin Cities area that reflect a crisis for public health and for the Indian community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Environmental, Social, and Personal Correlates of Having Ever Had Sexual Intercourse Among American Indian Youths.
- Author
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Hellerstedt, Wendy L., Rhodes, Kristine L., Peterson-Hickey, Melanie, and Garwick, Ann
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SEXUAL intercourse , *HUMAN sexuality , *TEENAGERS , *NATIVE Americans , *EXPERIENCE , *SURVEYS , *STUDENTS , *YOUTH & violence - Abstract
Objectives: We examined the correlates of having ever had sexual intercourse among American Indians aged 13 to 18 years in Minnesota. Methods: To assess key environmental, social, and individual correlates of sexual experience, we analyzed data from 4135 American Indian youths who participated in the 1998 and 2001 Minnesota Student Surveys. Results: Forty-two percent of those aged 13 to 15 years and 69% of those aged 16 to 18 years reported that they had ever had sexual intercourse. Correlates of sexual experience varied by age and gender. School connections had the strongest negative associations with sexual experience in young girls, and living with a father had negative associations with sexual experience for younger, but not older, youths. Sexual experience was most strongly and positively associated with risk behaviors such as substance use, violence exposure, and violence perpetuation. Conclusions: The strongest correlates of sexual experience for American Indian youths were high-risk behaviors and exposure to violence. Future work is needed to develop and employ measures that reflect youth assets and that specifically reflect the experiences of American Indian youths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Early Otitis Media Among Minnesota American Indians: The Little Ears Study.
- Author
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Daly, Kathleen A., Pirie, Phyllis L., Rhodes, Kristine L., Hunter, Lisa L., and Davey, Cynthia S.
- Subjects
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EAR diseases , *HEARING disorders in children , *OTITIS media in children , *PEDIATRIC otology , *CHILDREN'S health , *HEALTH of the indigenous peoples of the Americas , *MIDDLE ear diseases , *INFANT care , *MATERNAL health , *MEDICAL care research , *GENETICS ,OTITIS media diagnosis - Abstract
Objectives. We examined relationships between otitis media risk factors, sociodemographic characteristics, and maternal knowledge and attitudes and early onset of otitis media. Methods. Pregnant women from Minnesota American Indian reservations and an urban clinic were enrolled in our study between 1998 and 2001. Follow-up was performed on enrollees' infants until the children were 2 years old. Research nurses collected data by ear examination, from interviews and questionnaires given to enrolled mothers, and otitis media episodes that were abstracted from medical records. Results. Sixty-three percent of infants had experienced an otitis media episode by 6 months of age. Logistic regression analyses showed that maternal otitis media history, infant history of upper respiratory infection, and compliance with study visits were significantly related to early otitis media onset. Although high percentages of infants were exposed to cigarette smoke and other children and were formula fed, these factors were not related to otitis media. Mothers' prenatal awareness of otitis media risks associated with environmental tobacco smoke exposure and formula feeding did not predict their postpartum behaviors. Conclusions. We found that infant history of upper respiratory infection and maternal otitis media history are risk factors for early otitis media in American Indian infants. Mothers' prepartum knowledge and attitudes regarding otitis media did not predict their postpartum avoidance of risk behaviors. (Am J Public Health. 2007;97:317-322.) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Cigarette Smoking Among American Indian Youth in Minneapolis–St. Paul
- Author
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Forster, Jean L., Brokenleg, Isaiah, Rhodes, Kristine L., Lamont, Genelle R., and Poupart, John
- Subjects
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CIGARETTE smokers , *TEENAGERS , *NATIVE Americans , *TOBACCO use ,RISK factors - Abstract
Background: Reported prevalence of cigarette smoking among American Indian youth is higher than other racial/ethnic minorities, and limited data indicate that this disparity is especially pronounced in the Upper Midwest of the U.S. The purposes of this study are to measure traditional and recreational tobacco use among American Indian youth in an urban Upper Midwest area, and to identify social and environmental factors associated with recreational tobacco use (cigarette smoking). Methods: A cross-sectional convenience sample of 336 American Indian youth aged 11–18 years was given a self-administered survey. Data were analyzed using bivariate chi-square tests and multivariate logistical stepwise regression. Results: Almost 37% reported some recreational smoking in the previous 30 days, with about three times as many in the group aged 16–18 years reporting smoking as in the group aged 11–13 years (p<0.0001). Social exposure to cigarette smoking was very strong; more than three fourths reported living with an adult who smokes, and 44% have a brother/a sister who smokes. Yet more than 65% report a household rule against their smoking, and 43% report a household rule against anyone smoking inside. Youth who smoke report buying cigarettes often and smoking on school property. Household rules against smoking and hearing of someone getting caught smoking at school have an independent negative association with likelihood of being a smoker. Conclusions: These results indicate that American Indian youth in this area report high use of recreational tobacco, and the statewide focus on youth smoking prevention has not eliminated the disparity in smoking levels between American Indian youth and Minnesota youth overall. These findings suggest several pathways to reduce cigarette smoking among urban American Indian youth. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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