The Báa nnilah Program: Results of a Chronic-Illness Self-Management Cluster Randomized Trial with the Apsáalooke Nation

Author:

Held Suzanne1ORCID,Feng Du2ORCID,McCormick Alma3,Schure Mark1,Other Medicine Lucille3,Hallett John4,Inouye Jillian5,Allen Sarah6,Holder Shannon1,Bull Shows Brianna1,Trottier Coleen1,Kyro Alexi1,Kropp Samantha1,Turns Plenty Nicole7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Human Development & Community Health, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT 59717, USA

2. Department of Nursing, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV 89154, USA

3. Messengers for Health, Crow Agency, MT 59022, USA

4. Petaluma Health Center, Petaluma, CA 94954, USA

5. Manoa School of Nursing, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA

6. Department of Family Life & Human Development, Southern Utah University, Cedar City, UT 84720, USA

7. OneHealth Bighorn, Hardin, MT 59034, USA

Abstract

Indigenous people in Montana are disproportionately affected by chronic illness (CI), a legacy of settler colonialism. Existing programs addressing CI self-management are not appropriate because they are not consonant with Indigenous cultures in general and the Apsáalooke culture specifically. A research partnership between the Apsáalooke (Crow Nation) non-profit organization Messengers for Health and Montana State University co-developed, implemented, and evaluated a CI self-management program for community members. This article examines qualitative and quantitative program impacts using a pragmatic cluster randomized clinical trial design with intervention and waitlist control arms. The quantitative and qualitative data resulted in different stories on the impact of the Báa nnilah program. Neither of the quantitative hypotheses were supported with one exception. The qualitative data showed substantial positive outcomes across multiple areas. We examine why the data sets led to two very different stories, and provide study strengths and limitations, recommendations, and future directions.

Funder

National Institute on Minority Health

Montana Healthcare Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference55 articles.

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2. Woodcock, C., Korda, H., Erdem, E., and Pedersen, S. (2013). Chronic disease self-management program (CDSMP) process evaluation. IMPAQ Int.

3. Improving chronic illness self-management with the Apsáalooke Nation: Development of the Báa nnilah program;Held;Soc. Sci. Med.,2019

4. Daasachchuchik: A Trauma-Informed Approach to Developing a Chronic Illness Self-Management Program for the Apsáalooke People;Schure;J. Health Care Poor Underserved,2020

5. Developing an Indigenous Goal-Setting Tool: Counting Coup;Keene;Turt. Isl. J. Indig. Health,2020

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