# Cultural Guideposts of Health: A crisis response evaluation framework for California’s diverse Indigenous communities

**Authors:** Krista Armenta-Belen, LittleDove Rey, Joshua Severns, Daniel Dickerson, Virginia Hedrick, Gloria Miele, Mamta Bhakta, Beth Rutkowski, Thomas Freese

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/22799036251410263 · Journal of Public Health Research · 2026-01-20

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a culturally responsive crisis response framework for California's American Indian and Alaska Native communities, emphasizing traditional practices and Indigenous perspectives on health.

## Contribution

The novel contribution is a culturally adaptive evaluation framework co-developed with Indigenous leaders and knowledge keepers.

## Key findings

- The Cultural Guideposts of Health framework integrates Indigenous definitions of health and wellness into crisis response.
- A toolkit was developed to evaluate crisis interventions across diverse Tribal and urban Indigenous communities.
- The framework emphasizes domains like Indigenous spirituality and cultural practices as essential to health.

## Abstract

American Indian and Alaska Native communities are disproportionately impacted by the crises of overdose death, self-harm, and other traumas, which lead to inequities in health outcomes. Despite these inequities, American Indian and Alaska Native people have rich and varied traditional practices rooted in resiliency that promote health but have often been overlooked, excluded, or dismissed entirely in Western medicine.

This paper describes Cultural Guideposts of Health, a crisis response evaluation framework for California’s diverse American Indian and Alaska Native communities. In an adaptation of Yamane and Helm’s 2022 Culture-as-Health paradigm, a Guiding Coalition of Traditional Healers and Knowledge Keepers convened, both in person and online, and collaborated with a team of academic researchers and cultural advisors to develop the Cultural Guideposts of Health Framework. The Guiding Coalition included cultural leaders, youth, individuals with lived experience, health care providers, and community members throughout the state and engaged in an iterative process of Indigenous Conversation to develop a culturally adaptive and responsive crisis response model for use across diverse Tribal and urban American Indian and Alaska Native communities.

Discussion topics included Indigenous definitions of health, healing, and wellness and culture as health within domains of Indigenous Spirituality, Indigenous Cultural Practices, Indigenous World View, and Place-Based Sacred sites.

The final product was a toolkit which includes a framework for evaluating crisis response and other evidence-based interventions that is adaptable across geography, organizational structures, service delivery models, and distinct Tribal contexts. Future directions include pilot testing and exploration of the framework’s utility as an evaluation tool.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** overdose (MESH:D062787), traumas (MESH:D014947)

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12820021/full.md

## References

37 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12820021/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12820021