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Journal Article

Citation

Spein AR. Int. J. Circumpolar Health. 2008; 67(1): 122-134.

Affiliation

Centre for Sami Health Research, Karasjok, Norway. annas@ism.uit.no

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, International Union for Circumpolar Health, Publisher Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

18468264

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To summarise knowledge about substance use among young indigenous Sami living in Norway. STUDY DESIGN: Data from the North Norwegian Youth Study (NNYS)--a longitudinal questionnaire study conducted in 1994-1995 and 1997-1998 that represents the main source of information in the 1990s. METHODS: The 1994-1995 sample included 3,000 ethnically diverse high school students (response rate [RR]: 85%), while the 1997-1998 follow-up sample included 1500 respondents (RR: 55%). RESULTS: Young Sami did not show higher rates than their non-Sami peers for any of the investigated substances. In contrast, young Sami reported lower drinking rates at both assessments when compared with regional and national non-indigenous peers. Nonetheless, Sami with weaker cultural ties reported the highest intraethnic smoking and drinking rates. CONCLUSIONS: Young Sami are not at higher risk for substance use than their regional and national non-indigenous peers. These findings contrast some findings among other indigenous groups indicating "high" indigenous and "low" majority substance use rates.



Language: en

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