Abstract

Background: Information on strategies adopted by Indigenous peoples against COVID-19 is scarce, and history shows that Indigenous peoples in the Amazon region may be particularly affected by the  pandemic.
 Method: The studies were identified in well-known international journals found in two electronic databases: Scopus and Embase. The data were cross-checked with information from the main international newspapers.
 Results: Mental disorders in the affective spectrum (unipolar major depression, dysthymia, bipolarity) and anxiety disorders (generalized anxiety disorder, panic attacks, social phobia) also mark the reality of Indigenous psychiatric vulnerability.
 Conclusions: To mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on Indigenous communities in Brazil, a health service for Indigenous groups, a crisis office, and a monitoring panel were created. In the state of Amazonas, home to more Indigenous people than any other Brazilian state, 95% of the intensive care beds are occupied.  Thus, mental health disparities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples may be related to the underlying economic, social, and political inequities that are legacies of colonization and oppression of Indigenous cultures; the disproportionate rates of mental disorders must be understood in context, not as intrinsic predisposition of Indigenous peoples, but as reflecting persistent inequalities.

Highlights

  • Background Information on strategies adopted byIndigenous peoples against COVID-19 is scarce, and history shows that Indigenous peoples in the Amazon region may be affected by the pandemic

  • The increase in new coronavirus cases represents a serious threat to the health of Indigenous peoples worldwide, primarily because of their precarious status of health services access

  • Indigenous peoples have faced smallpox, malaria, and measles epidemics because of contact with European colonists, which culminated in irreversible genocides

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Summary

Introduction

Background Information on strategies adopted byIndigenous peoples against COVID-19 is scarce, and history shows that Indigenous peoples in the Amazon region may be affected by the pandemic.

Results
Conclusion
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