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Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders (AA/NH/PI) are one of the most diverse racial and ethnic groups in the U.S., encompassing origins from over forty countries. Historical biases stereotyping AA/NH/PI as "model minorities" compounded with familial norms of privacy regarding mental health in these communities has reduced the presence of AA/NH/PI in substance use treatment and research. This has led many individuals in U.S. society to inaccurately construe that AA/NH/PI lack mental health difficulties. In addition, although the term AA/NH/PI was developed to increase within-group solidarity and cohesion, the reductionism of categorizing AA/NH/PI into a single racial/ethnic group obscures the corresponding subjectivities of distinct AA/NH/PI subgroups. Such reductionism overshadows the underrepresentation of specific AA/NH/PI subgroups in substance use research, practice, and as investigators and students in the field. In this commentary, we, a group of AA substance use investigators, examine extant research on AA/NH/PI substance use and call to attention the underrepresentation of AA/NH/PI in the field of substance use: (1) as a diverse community understudied; (2) as investigators underfunded; (3) and as students under-supported. AA/NH/PI may be one of the fastest growing racial/ethnic groups in the United States, but because of structural inequities which forego seeing some AA/NH/PI as having minoritized identities, we have become invisible.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2024.111369 | DOI Listing |
Drug Alcohol Depend
August 2024
School of Social Work, Boston University, United States.
Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders (AA/NH/PI) are one of the most diverse racial and ethnic groups in the U.S., encompassing origins from over forty countries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDrug Alcohol Depend
March 2024
Department of Population Health, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York City, NY, United States of America.
Background: The increasing relevance of substance use disorder (SUD) within the Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (AA&NH/PI) communities, particularly amidst rising anti-Asian hate incidents and the disproportionate health and economic challenges faced by the NH/PI community during the COVID-19 pandemic, underscores the urgency of understanding substance use patterns, treatment disparities, and outcomes.
Methods: Following PRISMA guidelines, 37 out of 231 studies met the search criteria. Study characteristics, study datasets, substance use rates, SUD rates, treatment disparities, treatment quality, completion rates, and analyses disaggregated by the most specific AA&NH/PI ethnic group reported were examined.