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Ethnographic Interview
Abstract:For an occupational therapist unfamiliar with a culturally diverse treatment population, ethnographic interview is described as an appropriate method for assessing client group needs. This study describes the use of ethnographic interview as a tool which was culturally sensitive to the occupational behaviors of American Indians and Alaska Natives of the Northwest involved in drug and alcohol treatment. Results of the interviews helped the researcher identify sociocultural factors in the acquisition and maintenance of maladaptive behaviors. Recurring themes of the extended family network, the strength and complexity of social norms and codes, and the pervasiveness of alcohol use among this population are described in review of the literature and results of the interviews. Results of the Tennessee Self-concept Scale revealed an overall measure of self-esteem significantly lower than that of the normed population, and enerally supported rehabilitation issues originally identified by the f iterature and expanded on in the interviews. Implications for treatment discuss acceptance of the therapist by members of the culture, the concept of nonmterference, the role of purposeful activity, cultural identification and assimilation, and the use of group work.
Keywords:Creativity  flow  self-actualization  spirituality  breast cancer
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