Sunday, July 23, 2023

American Indian/Alaska Native Health Equity; Private Sector Opportunities

Health Affairs' fourth installment (July 21) of the past week in its Forefront series, "Private Sector Solutions For Health Equity," is written by two principals in Indigenous Pact, a public-benefit corporation whose mission is "[to] provide health care benefits and reimbursement to American Indians and Alaska Native and promote the autonomy and sovereignty of American Indian tribal government over the health of their people.”

The article is a comprehensive review of the hurdles currently faced by indigenous peoples in obtaining health care goods and services, which they introduce with this observation:
The story of American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) health is fractured by genocide and systematic, forced migration away from lands that nourished good health. What existed unsullied for thousands of years was essentially wiped away when colonial settlers stepped foot onto the land that is now called the United States. And what exists now are pieces of brokenness and transgenerational trauma that pervade nearly every aspect of indigenous health.

There’s a well-known, albeit sardonic, pronouncement in Indian Country that admonishes, “You’d better get sick by June or there won’t be any money left—and if you do need medical intervention, it’d better be life or limb because those are the only things that will get authorized.” Unfortunately, it’s funny because it’s true.

The solutions are broad, ambitious, and unflinching. It's way past time to address the needs of this country's original occupants. 

No comments: