COVID-19 Infections: Native Americans Facing Existential Threat

The COVID 19 outbreak has public health officials concerned that Native American communities may be especially susceptible to the pandemic because of underlying health issues, including high rates of diabetes, obesity and heart disease.

New Mexico’s 19 indigenous pueblos – communities that range from several thousand members to just 300 – view the coronavirus as an existential threat after early infections raced through San Felipe and Zia pueblos, propagated in one instance by people attending a funeral.

“You hear about all these other big towns that are losing 10, 50, 100 – that’s already half of our whole tribe,” Picuris Governor Craig Quanchello said.

“We’ve got to do everything we can to protect our race here.” Native Americans accounted for more than 55% of confirmed COVID-19 infections in New Mexico as of Friday, though they’re only 11% of the general population.

The stark discrepancy in part reflects extensive testing in the heavily Native American northwest part of the state, a hot spot for infections.

Tribal leaders also say the surge of Native American infections and related deaths reflects chronic underfunding of health care services and basic infrastructure such as household plumbing.

The pueblos, whose homelands trace the upper Rio Grande as the river descends for 150 miles (241 kilometers) from Taos to Albuquerque and extend west near the Arizona line, have closed down cultural attractions, casinos and hotels.

Roadblocks against nonessential visitors extend to villages atop mesas in Acoma Pueblo’s “sky city” and on the Hopi reservation in Arizona, which is encircled by the Navajo Nation.

In Picuris Pueblo, roughly 200 residents in the core settlement have all tested negative for the virus. It’s been more than a month since the tribe erected a roadblock and guardhouse with video surveillance to intercept unannounced tourists.

Tribal members also are screened for coronavirus symptoms, such as fever, by taking body temperature readings from each passing car and the occasional bicycle.

Among New Mexico’s pueblos, ceremonial rites and political meetings in compact subterranean kiva rooms have been upended, as have preparations for annual feast days – mass gatherings with traditional dancing and regalia.

New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham has extended through mid-May an aggressive stay-at-home order that bans gatherings larger than five people and requires arriving air travellers to self-quarantine, while allowing some nonessential businesses to start offering curbside service after a weekslong closure. The northwest part of the state is on full-fledged lockdown as infections increase.

Pueblos are going further with their own curfews, and Picuris is vowing to stay on lockdown for an additional two weeks before considering any changes.

The pueblos have dealt with devastating contagions in the past. Bouts of smallpox – brought by Spanish conquistadors in the late-1500s – cut the Picuris Pueblo’s population from roughly 2,500 to 500 by 1650 in the first of several close brushes with annihilation, said Michael Adler, a professor of anthropology at Southern Methodist University.

He leads a satellite campus outside Taos and has worked with Picuris Pueblo to explore its ancestral history. In the 20th century, the pueblo’s population fell below 150 after brutal raids; it’s unclear whether the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918 played a role. State officials say the coronavirus crisis was foreshadowed by the H1N1 swine flu pandemic in 2009.

Native Americans experienced fatalities at four times the rate of the general public, according to a 12-state study – including New Mexico, Arizona and Utah – published that year in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

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