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Why are Native Americans more likely to die of flu?
By Elena Shore
New America Media
Sep 10, 2010
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.—
American Indians are four times more likely to die of the flu than other
Americans, but experts aren’t sure why. That’s according to a 12-state
study by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention which also
looked at vaccination rates.
"The difference in
American Indian death rates is not due to a difference in vaccination
rates," Dr. John Redd of the Indian Health Service, a federal health
program for Native Americans, told members of ethnic media at a recent
New America Media news briefing in Albuquerque. "Nor do we think that
just being American Indian itself is a risk factor," he added.
The major factor health
observers have found, he says, is that American Indians are more likely
to have chronic health conditions such as diabetes and asthma. That’s
one possible reason that could explain the high death rates.
American Indians, who make
up nearly 10 percent of the population of New Mexico, had the highest
rate of flu-related hospitalization and death of any ethnic group in the
state during last year’s H1N1 epidemic. Dr. Joan Baumbach, a medical
epidemiologist who conducts influenza surveillance for the New Mexico
Department of Health, found that their hospitalization rate (90 out of
100,000) was twice that of African Americans and more than three times
that of whites.
Their death rate from the
flu (five out of 100,000) was twice that of Hispanics, the second most
affected group.
Although health officials
may not be certain why this is true, they agreed that the best way to
counteract these effects is by increasing awareness and vaccination
rates across all communities in New Mexico. The state currently has a 25
percent vaccination rate, similar to the national average, but the
numbers are lower among African Americans and Latinos, according to Amy
Groom, a CDC public health adviser assigned to Indian Health Service.
Baumbach adds that
misconceptions about the flu vaccine persist in all populations. The
flu, she says, is "definitely preventable, but the question is, what are
we preventing?" People who get the vaccine, she said, "may get the flu,
but (the vaccine) prevented hospitalization. Or they may get
hospitalized, but (the vaccine) prevented death. There are degrees of
prevention." Yet many Americans are still hesitant to get the vaccine.
"It’s unreal that I can’t
even persuade my own husband to get the flu shot," said Arleen Porcell-Pharr,
a public affairs specialist at the CDC in Atlanta. She said her husband
resisted the vaccine until he knew someone personally who died from the
flu. "One day he came home somber and said, ‘I just heard that an
elementary school classmate died from the swine flu.’ That was the
moment," she said, when he decided to get the vaccine. In New Mexico,
where nearly half the population is Latino (45.6 percent according to
the 2009 figures from the U.S. Census Bureau), language, poverty, and
fears over immigration status can be barriers to accessing information
about the vaccine.
"We’re going to have more
Hispanics moving here, people who don’t speak English," said Sandra
Chavez of Radio Lobo in Albuquerque. "We need to make sure the message
gets to Hispanic homes." Pablo Gutierrez, producer of Univision Ch. 41,
said that last year his station received a number of calls from viewers
who were afraid they would be asked for their papers, or who could not
afford the cost of the vaccine. "Twenty to 25 dollars is a lot for many
of our families that live in extreme poverty," said Francisco Ronquillo,
a regional coordinator with the University of New Mexico’s Health
Sciences Center.
The most successful
programs, said Ronquillo, involve making the vaccine accessible - from
the promotora model of health workers who go out into the communities,
to a school immunization project that Ronquillo has been working on to
provide the vaccination through local schools. Experts hope that last
year’s H1N1 epidemic increased the public’s awareness about the
importance of getting the flu shot.
Last year, more than 61
million people got the flu virus and 13,000 people died from it in the
United States, according to Purcell-Pharr. This year’s seasonal flu shot
includes vaccines against influenza A H1N1 (the so-called "swine flu"
that became an epidemic last year), influenza A H3N1 (a virus that is
now spreading) and influenza B.
The seasonal flu shot is
recommended for anyone who is 6 months or older, and is particularly
recommended for vulnerable populations such as elders, ethnic
minorities, pregnant women, and anyone with a chronic disease such as
asthma, diabetes type 1 or 2, or HIV/AIDS. More information is at
cdc.gov/flu.
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