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Stark racial disparities persist in vaccinations, state-level CDC data shows

Stark racial disparities persist in vaccinations, state-level CDC data shows
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Stark racial disparities persist in vaccinations, state-level CDC data shows

Stark racial disparities persist in vaccinations, state-level CDC data shows
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Frontiers | Concrete Lessons: Policies and Practices Affecting the Impact of COVID-19 for Urban Indigenous Communities in the United States and Canada

2Centre for Indigenous Studies, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada 3Department of Family and Community Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, United States 4American Indian Studies, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, United States Throughout the Americas, most Indigenous people move through urban areas and make their homes in cities. Yet, the specific issues and concerns facing Indigenous people in cities, and the positive protective factors their vibrant urban communities generate are often overlooked and poorly understood. This has been particularly so under COVID-19 pandemic conditions. In the spring of 2020, the United Nations High Commissioner Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples called for information on the impacts of COVID-19 for Indigenous peoples. We took that opportunity to provide a response focused on urban Indigenous communities in the United States and Canada. Here, we expand on that response and Indigenous and hu

COVID-19 Vaccine Available for Native Americans at UMB

April 21, 2021 Among the most treasured gifts of family are the stories that are passed down from generation to generation. The spoken tales and traditions woven through time can resonate so deeply that they personify someone’s heritage. National Council of Urban Indian Health CEO Francys Crevier receives her first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine from Isabel Sangiorgi, a University of Maryland School of Nursing student who is volunteering as a vaccinator at the University of Maryland, Baltimore Vaccination Clinic. MATTHEW PAUL D AGOSTINO/UMB COVID-19 has posed a grave threat to stop that flow of cultural richness in the Native American community across the country, where in some areas they have faced the highest COVID-19 mortality rate compared to any other ethnicity. The community is encouraging each other to protect themselves by getting a COVID-19 vaccine and practicing all the public safety measures.

Push To Vaccinate Indigenous Americans Leaves Some Urban Indians Out Of The Loop

Listen to an audio version of this story. The Indian Health Service has delivered coronavirus vaccine doses to the most far-flung corners of the country. From remote villages in Alaska to the bottom of the Grand Canyon, Indigenous Americans as young as 16 have had access to the shot for weeks. But some urban Native people haven t been so lucky. Count 55-year-old Jonathan Concha of Albuquerque among them. For the most part, everybody else in my family has been vaccinated already. So, I m the last one, he said just after receiving his first shot in mid-March. Concha scored a spot at a mass-vaccination event co-hosted by New Mexico s Indian Affairs Department, Albuquerque s urban Indian health clinic, and several other partners . But this came after two months of roadblocks.

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