Of the 754 respondents, the majority were unmarried (520 patients, or 69 percent) and female (515 patients, or 68 percent). Their mean±SD age was 39.6±13.5 years (range, 19 to 90 years), and they had generally low levels of income, educational attainment, and employment. A total of 549 patients (73 percent) were enrolled tribal members, and 234 patients (31 percent) had a blood quantum—the total percentage of direct American Indian or Alaska Native ancestry reported by the patient—of at least 50 percent. For 231 patients (31 percent), tobacco use or abuse was noted in the medical record. Other common medical conditions were hypertension, obesity, and asthma. The types of health conditions, the average number of current medications, and the relatively low SF-6 scores we observed were to be expected in a sample characterized by a moderate burden of chronic illness.
Overall, 423 respondents (56 percent) screened positive for lifetime alcohol abuse. Of these, 383 (91 percent) answered two additional questions about whether the alcohol abuse had occurred within the previous year; 202 of the 383 respondents gave an affirmative response to at least one of these questions, which suggests a prevalence rate of current abuse of 27 percent for the sample of 754 patients.
The survey results are summarized in
+Table 1 by respondents' alcohol abuse status. Significance for the univariate logistic models is reported. Chi square and t tests confirmed the findings of the univariate analyses with the exception that no association was found between screening positive and body pain (t=1.58, df=1, p=.117 versus W=4.8, df=1, p≤.05), and an association was found between screening positive and use of traditional health practices (χ
2=4.52, df=1, p≤.05 versus W=3, df=1, p=.084).
Screening positive was significantly associated with being male, being unmarried, having a history of tobacco use or abuse as noted in the medical record, having been a victim of violence, reporting having been a smoker, being a current smoker, and reporting feeling depressed. The final logistic regression model for screening positive for alcohol abuse as opposed to screening negative was significant (χ2=83.37, df=25, p≤.001) and accounted for 23 percent of the variance. After baseline variables were controlled for, four variables were significantly associated with screening positive for alcohol abuse: male sex (W=4.5, df=1, p≤.05, odds ratio=1.92, 95 percent confidence interval=1.05 to 3.51); being single (W=5.7, df=1, p≤.05, odds ratio=2.45, CI=1.17 to 5.11); having ever been mugged, robbed, or assaulted (W=15.6, df=1, p≤.001, odds ratio=3.14, CI=1.78 to 5.54); and feeling sad, blue, or depressed for at least two weeks in the past year (W=5.3, df=1, p≤.05, odds ratio=2.03, CI= 1.11 to 3.70).