The Beaufort Gazette

Native Americans have shorter life spans. Better health care isn’t the only answer

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Katherine Goodlow is only 20, but she has experience­d enough to know that people around her are dying too young.

Goodlow, a member of the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe, said she’s lost six friends and acquaintan­ces to suicide, two to car crashes, and one to appendicit­is. Four of her relatives died in their 30s or 40s, from causes such as liver failure and COVID-19, she said. And she recently lost a 1-year-old nephew.

“Most Native American kids and young people lose their friends at a young age,” said Goodlow, who is considerin­g becoming a mental health therapist to help her community. “So, I’d say we’re basically used to it, but it hurts worse every time we lose someone.”

Native Americans tend to die much earlier than white Americans. Their median age at death was 14 years younger, according to an analysis of 201821 data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

The disparity is even greater in Goodlow’s home state. Indigenous South Dakotans who died between 2017 and 2021 had a median age of 58 – 22 years younger than white South Dakotans, according to state data.

Donald Warne, a physician who is co-director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Indigenous Health and a member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, can rattle off the most common medical conditions and accidents

killing Native Americans.

But what’s ultimately behind this low life expectancy, agree Warne and many other experts on Indigenous health, are social and economic forces. They argue that in addition to bolstering medical care and fully funding the Indian Health Service – which provides health care to Native Americans – there needs to be a greater investment in case management, parenting classes, and home visits.

“It’s almost blasphemy for a physician to say,” but “the answer to addressing these things is not hiring more doctors and nurses,” Warne said. “The answer is having more community-based prevention­s.”

The Indian Health Service funds several kinds of these programs, including community health worker initiative­s, and efforts to

increase access to fresh produce and traditiona­l foods.

Private insurers and state Medicaid programs, including South Dakota’s, are increasing­ly covering such services. But insurers don’t pay for all the services and aren’t reaching everyone who qualifies, according to Warne and the National Academy for State Health Policy.

Warne pointed to Family Spirit, a program developed by the Johns Hopkins center to improve health outcomes for Indigenous mothers and children.

Chelsea Randall, the director of maternal and child health at the Great Plains Tribal Leaders’ Health Board, said community health workers educate Native pregnant women and connect them with resources during home visits.

“We can be with them

throughout their pregnancy and be supportive and be the advocate for them,” said Randall, whose organizati­on runs Family Spirit programs across seven reservatio­ns in the Dakotas, and in Rapid City, South Dakota.

The community health workers help families until children turn 3, teaching parenting skills, family planning, drug abuse prevention, and stress management. They can also integrate the tribe’s culture by, for example, using their language or birthing traditions.

The health board funds Family Spirit through a grant from the federal Health Resources and Services Administra­tion, Randall said. Community health workers, she said, use some of that money to provide child car seats and to teach parents how to properly install them to counter high rates of fatal crashes.

Other causes of early Native American deaths include homicide, drug overdoses, and chronic diseases, such as diabetes, Warne said. Native Americans also suffer a disproport­ionate number of infant and maternal deaths.

The crisis is evident in the obituaries from the Sioux Funeral Home, which mostly serves Lakota people from the Pine Ridge Reservatio­n and surroundin­g area. The funeral home’s Facebook page posts obituaries for older adults, but also for many infants, toddlers, teenagers, young adults, and middleaged residents.

Misty Merrival, who works at the funeral home, blames poor living conditions. Some community members struggle to find healthy food or afford heat in the winter, she said. They may live in homes with broken windows or that are crowded with extended family members. Some neighborho­ods are strewn with trash, including intravenou­s needles and broken bottles.

Seeing all these premature deaths has inspired Merrival to keep herself and her teenage daughter healthy by abstaining from drugs and driving safely. They also talk every day about how they’re feeling, as a suicide-prevention strategy.

“We’ve made a promise to each other that we wouldn’t leave each other like that,” Merrival said.

Many Native Americans live in small towns or on poor, rural reservatio­ns. But rurality alone doesn’t explain the gap in life expectancy. For example, white people in rural Montana live 17 years longer, on average, than Native Americans in the state, according to state data reported by Lee Enterprise­s newspapers.

Many Indigenous people also face racism or personal trauma from child or sexual abuse and exposure to drugs or violence, Warne said. Some also deal with generation­al trauma from government programs and policies that broke up families and tried to suppress Native American culture.

Even when programs are available, they’re not always accessible.

Families without strong internet connection­s can’t easily make video appointmen­ts. Some lack cars or gas money to travel to clinics, and public transporta­tion options are limited.

Warne said the overall conditions on some reservatio­ns can create despair. But those same reservatio­ns, including Pine Ridge, also contain flourishin­g art scenes and language and cultural revitaliza­tion programs. And not all Native American communitie­s are poor.

Katrina Fuller is the health director at Sica gu Co, a nonprofit group on the Rosebud Reservatio­n in South Dakota. Fuller, a member of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe, said the organizati­on works toward “wicozani,” or the good way of life, which encompasse­s the physical, emotional, cultural, and financial health of the community.

“Some people out here that are struggling, they have dreams, too. They just need the resources, the training, even the moral support,” Fuller said. “I had one person in our health coaching class tell me they just really needed someone to believe in them, that they could do it.”

 ?? ARIELLE ZIONTS KFF Health News/TNS ?? Katherine Goodlow holds Coco the puppy outside her grandmothe­r’s home in Hisle on the Pine Ridge Reservatio­n in South Dakota.
ARIELLE ZIONTS KFF Health News/TNS Katherine Goodlow holds Coco the puppy outside her grandmothe­r’s home in Hisle on the Pine Ridge Reservatio­n in South Dakota.

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