Health
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Two employees of the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium (ANTHC), Rhone Baumgartner, 46, and Kameron Hartvigson, 41, were among those who died in a devastating plane crash last week in Alaska.
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- By Kaili Berg
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In the past few weeks, the National Indian Health Board opened a funding opportunity for maternal health awareness; a federally-recognized tribe signed a first-of-its-kind data sharing agreement with the state of Washington; a Montana tribe announced it is taking over operations of an IHS clinic on its reservation; and federal health organizations modified public-facing health data to comply with President Trump’s executive orders, a move the Urban Indian Health Institute called a violation of tribal sovereignty. Here is our weekly round-up of health equity news.
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- By Elyse Wild and Kaili Berg
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This Saturday, February 8, the Coalition to Stop Violence Against Native Women (CSVANW) will be hosting the 5th Annual Indigenous Women’s Day event titled “ReMatriation: Return to the Land, Return to Ourselves” at the New Mexico State Capitol.
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- By Neely Bardwell
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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has stripped crucial health data from its website that tribal nations rely on to protect their citizens’ health, prompting immediate pushback from Native health leaders.
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- By Elyse Wild
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An FBI report on violent and sexual crimes against Native American women provides new data about the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons (MMIP) crisis.
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- By Elyse Wild
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- By Native News Online Staff
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Across Indian Country, tribal communities are proving that blending Indigenous practices with Western medicine creates more effective addiction treatment for their citizens. This 3-part series examines how Native-led programs are transforming care for tribal members through prevention, harm reduction, and recovery approaches that honor both traditional and clinical wisdom. This series was produced in partnership with the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.
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- By Elyse Wild
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The Trump administration has withdrawn an order that directed all federal agencies to temporarily halt their grants, loans, and financial assistance programs—a move that would have severely impacted healthcare services for American Indians and Alaska Natives. The order would have cut off funding to the Indian Health Service, a federal agency established to uphold the United States' treaty obligations to tribes, as well as grants supporting research and critical programs.
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- By Native News Online Staff
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The Trump administration ordered a pause on public communications for several federal health agencies, including the Indian Health Service, which provides healthcare to millions of American Indian and Alaska Native people.
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- By Elyse Wild
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Newly published data from New Mexico shows a promising drop in deaths by suicide among the state’s Native American population.
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- By Elyse Wild