The Weaving Healthy Families program: Promoting parenting practices, family resilience, and communal mastery
- PMID: 36710265
- PMCID: PMC10382600
- DOI: 10.1111/famp.12854
The Weaving Healthy Families program: Promoting parenting practices, family resilience, and communal mastery
Abstract
Parenting quality, family resilience, and community resilience and support have been found to be primary protective factors for the disproportionate burden of anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), substance use disorder (SUD), depression, and suicide that US Indigenous youth and adults tend to experience. The purpose of this research study was to examine pilot results for outcomes related to relational factors for Indigenous family members who participated in the Weaving Healthy Families (WHF) program (translated to Chukka Auchaffi' Natana, in the Choctaw tribal language), a culturally grounded and empirically informed program geared toward promoting wellness, family resilience, parenting practices, and community resilience while also preventing SUD and violence. This nonrandomized pre-experimental pilot intervention followed a longitudinal design, which included pre-test, a post-test, and a 6-, 9-, and 12-month post-intervention follow-up surveys. Repeated-measures regressions were utilized with generalized estimating equations (GEE) to examine changes in parenting, family resilience, and communal mastery before and after the intervention for 24 adults and adolescents (12-17) across eight tribal families. Results indicate that the overall quality of parenting improved, as measured by improved parental monitoring and reductions in inconsistent discipline and corporal punishment. We identified sex differences in positive parenting, poor monitoring, and corporal punishment, with greater decreases in these measures among males over time. Family resilience and communal mastery improved for adolescent and adult participants after the WHF program. Our results indicate promising improvements across relational, familial, and community ecological, which provide clear clinical implications.
Keywords: communal mastery; family; indigenous; intervention; native Americans or American Indians; parenting: Family resilience.
© 2023 Family Process Institute.
Similar articles
-
Centering Historical Oppression in Prevention Research with Indigenous Peoples: Differentiating Substance Use, Mental Health, Family, and Community Outcomes.J Soc Serv Res. 2023;49(2):133-146. doi: 10.1080/01488376.2023.2178596. Epub 2023 Feb 19. J Soc Serv Res. 2023. PMID: 37808249 Free PMC article.
-
Weaving Healthy Families Program: Promoting Resilience While Reducing Violence and Substance Use.Res Soc Work Pract. 2021 Jul;31(5):476-492. doi: 10.1177/1049731521998441. Epub 2021 Mar 18. Res Soc Work Pract. 2021. PMID: 34257501 Free PMC article.
-
Wakȟáŋyeža (Little Holy One) - an intergenerational intervention for Native American parents and children: a protocol for a randomized controlled trial with embedded single-case experimental design.BMC Public Health. 2021 Dec 18;21(1):2298. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-12272-9. BMC Public Health. 2021. PMID: 34922510 Free PMC article.
-
Azhe'é Bidziil (Strong Fathers): Study Protocol for the Pilot Evaluation of an American Indian Fatherhood Program to Improve the Health and Wellbeing of Diné (Navajo) Fathers.Front Public Health. 2022 Feb 10;9:790024. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.790024. eCollection 2021. Front Public Health. 2022. PMID: 35223758 Free PMC article.
-
The Family Resilience Inventory: A Culturally Grounded Measure of Current and Family-of-Origin Protective Processes in Native American Families.Fam Process. 2020 Jun;59(2):695-708. doi: 10.1111/famp.12423. Epub 2019 Feb 27. Fam Process. 2020. PMID: 30811593 Free PMC article.
Cited by
-
Neighborhood Deprivation, Trauma Profiles, Coping, and Stress Prospectively Predict Depressive Symptoms Among Young African American Mothers in the InterGEN Study: A Latent Class Analysis.J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2025 Jun 2. doi: 10.1007/s40615-025-02498-3. Online ahead of print. J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2025. PMID: 40457024
-
Centering Historical Oppression in Prevention Research with Indigenous Peoples: Differentiating Substance Use, Mental Health, Family, and Community Outcomes.J Soc Serv Res. 2023;49(2):133-146. doi: 10.1080/01488376.2023.2178596. Epub 2023 Feb 19. J Soc Serv Res. 2023. PMID: 37808249 Free PMC article.
-
The impact of caregiver burden on sense of coherence in Chinese family caregivers of people with dementia: the mediating effect of family resilience.BMC Psychol. 2025 Apr 11;13(1):369. doi: 10.1186/s40359-025-02678-0. BMC Psychol. 2025. PMID: 40217520 Free PMC article.
References
-
- Arvin M, Tuck E, & Morrill A (2013). Decolonizing feminism: Challenging connections between settler colonialism and heteropatriarchy. Feminist Formations, 25(1), 8–34. http://www.jstor.org/stable/43860665
-
- Bronfenbrenner U (1979). The ecology of human development: Experiments by nature and design. Harvard University Press.
-
- Bureau of Indian Affairs. (2021). https://www.bia.gov/bia
-
- Burnette CE (2014). Indigenous women’s resilience and resistance to historical oppression. Affilia, 30(2), 253–258. 10.1177/0886109914555215 - DOI
MeSH terms
Supplementary concepts
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical