Times Colonist

B.C. First Nations COVID sacrifices ‘paid off ’

Death rate below provincial average

- DIRK MEISSNER

First Nations in British Columbia have been largely successful in keeping COVID-19 out of their communitie­s by strictly following health guidelines and relying on the advice of elders about smallpox and tuberculos­is that decimated Indigenous population­s, say health officials.

Since Jan. 1, there have been 87 cases of COVID-19 among Indigenous people in B.C. and four deaths, a rate below the provincial average, said Dr. Shannon McDonald of the First Nations Health Authority on Friday. She said there are three active cases among Indigenous Peoples in B.C.

The province reported 10 new COVID-19 cases Friday, bringing the provincial total to 2,878. There have been 174 deaths, including five in the Island Health region, which has seen a total of 131 confirmed cases. There is one known active case in the region.

“I’m also pleased to tell you that, thanks to an extraordin­ary response from our First Nations communitie­s, the people the First Nations Health Authority serves have fared even better than the rest of the population in the face of this unpreceden­ted challenge,” McDonald said at a news conference on Friday.

She said the results are from data based on COVID-19 testing of more than 5,500 Indigenous people through a program unique in Canada that allows the sharing of federal and provincial data with the health authority.

McDonald credited the success to the many sacrifices made by First Nations communitie­s to follow health restrictio­ns, restrict travel and the willingnes­s to cancel cultural and family gatherings that are integral to Indigenous culture.

“The sacrifices made, some of them very difficult and painful, have paid off,” she said.

“The worst, which many anticipate­d and feared, did not happen. Transmissi­on of the virus within and between our communitie­s was kept to a very small number.”

McDonald said those communitie­s must continue efforts to prevent the spread of the virus, especially since the B.C. government decided this week to ease more health restrictio­ns, including allowing travel in the province.

“This is no time to lower our guard,” she said. “The curve has flattened but not flatlined.”

Judith Sayers, president of the Nuu-chah-nulth Tribal Council, said Friday Indigenous communitie­s are concerned that increased travel could mean the arrival of the virus in their territorie­s.

There are more than 10,000 Nuu-chah-nulth members in 14 communitie­s on the west coast of Vancouver Island, including Port Alberni, Bamfield and Tofino.

Sayers said the Nuu-chah-nulth were not properly consulted by the provincial government prior to the announceme­nt that health restrictio­ns would be eased.

The Nuu-chah-nulth and other Indigenous groups on B.C.’s central coast and the Interior said the failure to consult about the reopening puts Indigenous lives at risk.

Sayers said there have been no reported cases of COVID-19 in her communitie­s. “People tried very hard to follow the guidelines.”

She said not allowing large funerals “really hurt.”

But the memories of smallpox, which almost wiped out Nuuchah-nulth communitie­s, were invoked as strong forces to keep the virus away, she said.

“There was a certain effort that that would never happen this time,” Sayers said.

McDonald agreed, saying the advice of elders rememberin­g how previous diseases such as tuberculos­is spread uncontroll­ed through Indigenous communitie­s convinced residents to follow health guidelines.

“History is an ugly thing for many First Nations communitie­s,” she said. “We have people alive and well who tell the stories of previous pandemics.”

McDonald said the appearance of COVID-19 in April in the remote village of Alert Bay, located on Cormorant Island off northern Vancouver Island, also served as a wake-up call for people about the ability of the illness to show up anywhere.

Premier John Horgan urged travellers this week to be aware that some communitie­s are not prepared to welcome tourists or might not want them there because of the COVID-19 risk.

Sayers said talks are ongoing between Indigenous leaders, health and government officials about the potential impacts of the reopening on Indigenous communitie­s.

The tribal council had said that it was prepared to restrict access to their territorie­s, but Sayers did not say when or if that would occur.

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