Economic Science Institute, Chapman University, Orange, CA, USA; Tsimane Health and Life History Project, San Borja, Bolivia.
Tsimane Health and Life History Project, San Borja, Bolivia; School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Center for Evolution and Medicine, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA.
Lancet. 2020 May 30;395(10238):1727-1734. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(20)31104-1. Epub 2020 May 15.
Indigenous communities worldwide share common features that make them especially vulnerable to the complications of and mortality from COVID-19. They also possess resilient attributes that can be leveraged to promote prevention efforts. How can indigenous communities best mitigate potential devastating effects of COVID-19? In Bolivia, where nearly half of all citizens claim indigenous origins, no specific guidelines have been outlined for indigenous communities inhabiting native communal territories. In this Public Health article, we describe collaborative efforts, as anthropologists, physicians, tribal leaders, and local officials, to develop and implement a multiphase COVID-19 prevention and containment plan focused on voluntary collective isolation and contact-tracing among Tsimane forager-horticulturalists in the Bolivian Amazon. Phase 1 involves education, outreach, and preparation, and phase 2 focuses on containment, patient management, and quarantine. Features of this plan might be exported and adapted to local circumstances elsewhere to prevent widespread mortality in indigenous communities.
世界各地的土著社区有一些共同特征,使他们特别容易受到 COVID-19 并发症和死亡率的影响。他们也拥有可以利用的弹性特征,以促进预防工作。土著社区如何才能最大程度地减轻 COVID-19 的潜在破坏性影响?在玻利维亚,近一半的公民声称有土著血统,但对于居住在本土公社领土上的土著社区,没有制定具体的指导方针。在这篇公共卫生文章中,我们描述了作为人类学家、医生、部落领袖和地方官员的合作努力,制定并实施了一个多阶段的 COVID-19 预防和控制计划,该计划侧重于玻利维亚亚马逊地区的 Tsimane 觅食-园艺者的自愿集体隔离和接触者追踪。第 1 阶段涉及教育、宣传和准备,第 2 阶段侧重于遏制、患者管理和隔离。该计划的特点可以出口并适应当地情况,以防止土著社区的广泛死亡。