Health
- Type: Default
- Ad Visibility: Show Article Ads
- Reader Survey Question: No Question
- Video Poster: https://nativenewsonline.net/images/10_Years_Logo.png
MINNEAPOLIS—Award-winning chef Sean Sherman has added a few more job titles — educator, retailer, nonprofit executive — with his newest venture: Indigenous Food Lab (IFL).
- Details
- By Darren Thompson
- Type: Default
- Ad Visibility: Show Article Ads
- Reader Survey Question: No Question
- Video Poster: https://nativenewsonline.net/images/10_Years_Logo.png
Intergenerational trauma and violence has led to increased cardiovascular disease in American/Alaskan Native (AI/AN) women in childbearing years, according to a scientific statement published by The American Heart Association (AHA) this week.
- Details
- By Kaili Berg
- Type: Default
- Ad Visibility: Show Article Ads
- Reader Survey Question: Health
- Video Poster: https://nativenewsonline.net/images/10_Years_Logo.png
SACRAMENTO - A bill to designate May as Missing and Murdered Indigenous People Awareness month in California, has passed the state's Assembly and Senate.
- Details
- By Cyrus Norcross
- Type: Default
- Ad Visibility: Show Article Ads
- Reader Survey Question: No Question
- Video Poster: https://nativenewsonline.net/images/10_Years_Logo.png
- Details
- By Darren Thompson
- Type: Default
- Ad Visibility: Show Article Ads
- Reader Survey Question: Health
- Video Poster: https://nativenewsonline.net/images/10_Years_Logo.png
The Yurok Tribe has issued an emergency declaration in response to a growing number of drug overdoses on and near the Tribe’s Northern California reservation in Del Norte and Humboldt counties.
- Details
- By Elyse Wild
- Type: Default
- Ad Visibility: Show Article Ads
- Reader Survey Question: No Question
- Video Poster: https://nativenewsonline.net/images/10_Years_Logo.png
PHOENIX—Navajo Nation launched a new initiative to help its citizens caught up in a Medicaid scheme involving behavioral health centers that targeted Native Americans.
- Details
- By Darren Thompson
‘People don’t have time to grieve’ | Tribal Nations Turn to Harm Reduction in Battle Against Opioids
- Type: Default
- Ad Visibility: Show Article Ads
- Reader Survey Question: Health
- Video Poster: https://nativenewsonline.net/images/10_Years_Logo.png
A group of children from the Pala Band of Mission Indians was walking home from school in 2016 when they found a plastic bag holding 100 bright blue pills.
- Details
- By Elyse Wild
- Type: Default
- Ad Visibility: Show Article Ads
- Reader Survey Question: No Question
- Video Poster: https://nativenewsonline.net/images/10_Years_Logo.png
The Lummi Nation of Washington State is hosting a statewide tribal summit next week to explore solutions to one of the most significant issues facing Indian Country today: opioid overdoses.
- Details
- By Elyse Wild
- Type: Default
- Ad Visibility: Show Article Ads
- Reader Survey Question: No Question
- Video Poster: https://nativenewsonline.net/images/10_Years_Logo.png
PHOENIX— More than 100 Arizona healthcare providers are under investigation for insurance fraud that targeted Native Americans and cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars.
- Details
- By Darren Thompson
- Type: Default
- Ad Visibility: Show Article Ads
- Reader Survey Question: No Question
- Video Poster: https://nativenewsonline.net/images/10_Years_Logo.png
- Details
- By Rudy Oxendine