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How Many Indigenous People Died From COVID-19? Unknown.


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In May of 2020, the Navajo Nation reported one of the highest per-capita COVID-19 infection rates in the United States. Since that milestone, official data reveals that the Navajo Nation has been one of the hardest-hit populations during the pandemic. The Navajo Nation boasts the largest population of any Indigenous nation in the United States, and thousands of Navajos live outside the nation, in towns along the border, cities across the country, and in other parts of the world, making it difficult to tally the virus impacts on Navajo citizens.
It s made worse by a labyrinthian system of local, state, federal and tribal data-reporting systems that often do not communicate with each other or share information. In an effort to come up with a more reliable fatality count, reporters with the Indigenous Investigative Collective made multiple public-records requests for death records held by state medical examiners of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona and Utah. Those reques ....

United States , New Mexico , Northern Navajo Medical Center , Puerto Rico , Puerto Rican , Michael Toedt , Kate Schimel , Christian Marquez , Aleta Burchyski , Robert Gill , Elizabeth Fowler , Carolyn Angus Hornbuckle , Taryn Salinas , Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate , Michael Jensen , Tristan Ahtone , National Vital Statistics System , Centers For Disease , National Center , Apm Research Lab , American Journalists Association , Indian Health Service , Indian Health Institute , Indian Health Institute Echo , Utah Navajo Health System , National Native News ,

COVID-19 shows need for end-of-life planning for Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, Pacific Islanders.


COVID-19 shows need for end-of-life planning for Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, Pacific Islanders.
Published Monday, May. 31, 2021, 12:05 am
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By Charmaine Manansala
The Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) community includes many ethnicities and nationalities and it numbers roughly 20 million citizens in the United States, a population set to nearly double by 2050. At the same time the COVID-19 pandemic has caused an increase in anti-Asian hate crimes, we have also seen high COVID death rates amongst AANHPIs, with over 18,000 deaths as of March 2021. ....

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Column: It's our responsibility to improve our communities


Column: It s our responsibility to improve our communities
Cynthia Teniente-Matson, Ed.D, Guest columnist
Feb. 17, 2021
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Cynthia Teniente-Matson, Ed.D is president of Texas A&M University-San Antonio.Courtesy photo
We are living through a period that has stirred our collective national conscience about racial injustices and democratic literacy. This February, as we celebrate African American History Month, it feels especially important to honor and celebrate Black lives and the many contributions of African Americans to our society and culture.
At A&M-San Antonio, we’re in the midst of our month-long celebration, launched by a panel discussion and on-campus portrait exhibit, “Living in My Skin,” by former A&M System Regent and acclaimed San Antonio artist Lionel Sosa. The exhibit was accompanied by a panel discussion featuring Mr. Sosa and his collaborators who posed for portraits, as they shared their experiences living as Black ....

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