Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Volume 46, Issue 7 , Pages 849-858, July 2007

From Early to Late Adolescence: American Indian Youths' Behavioral Trajectories and Their Major Influences

Accepted 5 February 2007.

ABSTRACT 

Objective

This article identifies behavioral trajectories of American Indian adolescents and examines their predictors.

Method

A total of 401 urban and reservation American Indian adolescents were interviewed yearly from 2001 to 2004 (with 341 youths, or 85%, retained to 2004, and 385 completing at least two interviews). The Youth Self-Report total problem score is used to model behavior change trajectories, with psychological (addictions and mental health) and environmental (family, peer, community, and services) variables as independent variables. Analyses were based on PROC TRAJ, an SAS macro.

Results

Five trajectory groups were found. Youths who started with a Youth Self-Report score less than the clinical cutoff were low stable (n = 142) or low improving (n = 175). Youths with initial scores over the cutoff were very high chronic (n = 5), high improving (n = 30), or high chronic (n = 33). High improvers scored close to the low improving group by 2004. At baseline, the high improving group was more likely than the high chronic group to be from the reservation (odds ratio 5.94), have greater family satisfaction (1.14), and have fewer school problems (0.84). Over time, the high improving group had substance use and depression drop, family satisfaction increase, fewer parents with mental health or addictions problems, fewer peers using substances, and a decrease in neighborhood problems and stressors.

Conclusions

A significant majority (more than 82%) of the youths exhibited relatively low levels of problem behaviors over all 4 years, and 42% of those with clinically significant problems improved over time.

Key Words:  behavior , trajectories , American Indian

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 The research was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, (K02 MH01797-01A1) and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (R24DA13572-0 and R01 DA13227-01).Disclosure: The authors have no financial relationships to disclose.

PII: S0890-8567(09)62173-0

doi:10.1097/chi.0b013e318053753a

Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Volume 46, Issue 7 , Pages 849-858, July 2007