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我们的共同需求与优势:城市原住民和新冠疫情

Our Collective Needs and Strengths: Urban AI/ANs and the COVID-19 Pandemic.

作者信息

Maudrie Tara L, Lessard Kerry Hawk, Dickerson Jessica, Aulandez Kevalin M W, Barlow Allison, O'Keefe Victoria M

机构信息

Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health, International Health Department, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, United States.

Native American Lifelines, Baltimore, MD, United States.

出版信息

Front Sociol. 2021 Feb 10;6:611775. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2021.611775. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has raised national consciousness about health inequities that disproportionately impact American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities, yet urban AI/AN communities continue to remain a blind spot for health leaders and policymakers. While all United States cities have been the traditional homelands of AI/AN peoples since time immemorial, urban AI/ANs are consistently excluded in local and national health assessments, including recent reports pertaining to COVID-19. Today the majority of AI/ANs (71%) live in urban areas, and many cities have strong Urban Indian Health Programs (UIHPs) that provide space for medical care, community gatherings, cultural activities, and traditional healing. Many of these UIHPs are currently scrambling to meet the needs of their AI/AN service communities during the pandemic. While the COVID-19 pandemic brought new sources of funding to UIHPs, the lack of local AI/AN data and arbitrary funding restrictions precluded some UIHPs from addressing their communities' most immediate challenges such as food and economic insecurities. Despite these challenges, urban AI/AN communities carry the historical resilience of their ancestors as they weave strong community networks, establish contemporary traditions, and innovate to meet community needs. This article focuses on the experiences of one UIHP in Baltimore City during the COVID-19 pandemic to illustrate present-day challenges and strengths, as well as illuminate the urgency for tailored, local data-driven public health approaches to urban AI/AN health.

摘要

新冠疫情提高了国民对健康不平等问题的关注度,这些问题对美国印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民(AI/AN)社区造成了尤为严重的影响,但城市中的AI/AN社区仍然是卫生领域领导者和政策制定者的盲点。自远古以来,美国所有城市一直都是AI/AN民族的传统家园,但城市中的AI/AN群体在地方和全国性健康评估中始终被排除在外,包括近期与新冠疫情相关的报告。如今,大多数AI/AN群体(71%)居住在城市地区,许多城市都有强大的城市印第安人健康项目(UIHP),这些项目为医疗服务、社区聚会、文化活动和传统治疗提供了空间。在疫情期间,许多这样的UIHP目前都在努力满足其AI/AN服务社区的需求。虽然新冠疫情为UIHP带来了新的资金来源,但缺乏本地AI/AN数据以及任意的资金限制使一些UIHP无法应对其社区最紧迫的挑战,如食品和经济不安全问题。尽管面临这些挑战,城市中的AI/AN社区继承了其祖先的历史韧性,他们编织强大的社区网络,建立当代传统,并进行创新以满足社区需求。本文重点介绍巴尔的摩市一个UIHP在新冠疫情期间的经历,以说明当前的挑战和优势,并阐明针对城市AI/AN健康问题采取量身定制的、基于本地数据的公共卫生方法的紧迫性。

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Discrimination in the United States: Experiences of Native Americans.美国的歧视:美国原住民的经历。
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