Abstract

The Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has disproportionally affected Indigenous Peoples. Unfortunately, there is no accurate understanding of COVID-19's impacts on Indigenous Peoples and communities due to systematic erasure of Indigenous representation in data. Early evidence suggests that COVID-19 has been able to spread through pre-pandemic mechanisms ranging from disproportionate chronic health conditions, inadequate access to healthcare, and poor living conditions stemming from structural inequalities. Using innovative data, we comprehensively investigate the impacts of COVID-19 on Indigenous Peoples in New Mexico at the zip code level. Specifically, we expand the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Social Vulnerability Index (SVI) to include the measures of structural vulnerabilities from historical racisms against Indigenous Peoples. We found that historically-embedded structural vulnerabilities (e.g., Tribal land status and higher percentages of house units without telephone and complete plumbing) are critical in understanding the disproportionate burden of COVID-19 that American Indian and Alaska Native populations are experiencing. We found that historically-embedded vulnerability variables that emerged epistemologically from Indigenous knowledge had the largest explanatory power compared to other social vulnerability factors from SVI and COVID-19, especially Tribal land status. The findings demonstrate the critical need in public health to center Indigenous knowledge and methodologies in mitigating the deleterious impacts of COVID-19 on Indigenous Peoples and communities, specifically designing place-based mitigating strategies.

Highlights

  • The Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has disproportionally affected Indigenous Peoples globally and in the United States

  • Guided by Hózhó wisdom of Navajo people that emphasize the importance of interconnectedness and whole-system (Powell and Curley, 2008; Kahn-John and Koithan, 2015), we look at the relative impacts of multiple social vulnerability factors driven from the CDC’s Social Vulnerability Index (SVI) (Flanagan et al, 2011, 2018) as well as the relative impacts of historically-embedded vulnerability factors that are important for Indigenous Peoples on the population-adjusted confirmed COVID-19 cases at the zip code- level in New Mexico

  • Characteristics of social vulnerability differed in all dimensions in which zip codes that include Tribal lands had significantly more socioeconomic status vulnerability and more household composition & disability vulnerability

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Summary

Introduction

The Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has disproportionally affected Indigenous Peoples globally and in the United States. Even as of late August 2020, roughly 6 months into the pandemic, less than half of U.S states report race-specific COVID-19 information for American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN, hereafter) persons (Hatcher et al, 2020). Where such data is available, it shows a small glimpse of disproportionate impacts of COVID-19 that AIAN persons are experiencing. The AIAN population account for the largest proportion of the state’s total confirmed COVID19 cases, but they are most likely to die from COVID-19 related complications

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