Pubdate: Fri, 15 Aug 2003
Source: Eastern Door, The (CN QU)
Copyright: 2003 The Eastern Door
Contact:  http://www.easterndoor.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2464
Author: Maxine Hillary, M.A.

HIV/AIDS IN INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES: MORE THAN A THREAT TO HEALTH

A health educator from the Southern California Indian Centers' Job and 
Health Fair facetiously told a reported in the mid-90s, "We don't have an 
AIDS problem in the Native American Community. We don't have homosexuals 
and we don't use needle drugs." She stressed that this denial of a pending 
AIDS crisis in the indigenous population was what made the communities, 
already threatened by alcoholism and diabetes so vulnerable. Nearly two 
years later a Canadian study reports that while the majority of Aboriginal 
Canadian youths surveyed received HIV/AIDS information at school, seven out 
of ten reported having unprotected sex. The rate of AIDS among U.S. tribal 
communities is about 2,540 - over 2,000 of which are males.

Across the globe, 11 million AIDS orphans in Africa struggle to survive.

The loss of their parents has robbed them of the safety and security all 
parents strive to give their children.

But the disease hasn't only stolen their families, it's taking their 
cultures, languages and knowledge that has sustained their peoples for 
generations. Primary to this loss is the threat to the continent's food 
supply and the plants that feed and heal the people and bring balance to 
the ecosystem of Africa, perhaps the entire planet.

As of 2002, 42 million people had died from AIDS, of which 28 million were 
adults. Nearly half were women, the primary caretakers of children.

In places like Liberia, 95 percent of the people are from Indigenous tribal 
communities speaking numerous tribal languages, all of which are endangered 
as are tribal religions still practised by nearly half of the country.

In Kenya, less than ten percent of households headed by orphans report that 
they have enough traditional knowledge to be able to carry on the farming 
practices passed down by their ancestors.

These practices include the cultivation of a diverse variety of crops that 
have ensured a delicate balance in the local environment. A food crisis 
could be the result.

Disease has long been the conduit for the decimation of tribal communities. 
And while socialized health care and aggressive condom campaigns attempt to 
halt an epidemic, the fact remains that HIV/AIDS threatens Aboriginal 
Canadians at a rate five times that of non-Native Canadians. According to a 
report by the Canadian HIV/AIDS Information Centre in Ottawa, Canadian 
tribal communities face far greater incidences of HIV/AIDS-related 
discrimination, jurisdictional divisions, funding shortages and limited 
access to quality HIV testing.

These factors make it difficult for Canadian Aboriginal communities to 
respond in ways that equalize the AIDS response to that of most urban 
nonnative communities.

By the end of the '90s, 11,525 Canadians had died from AIDS and 40,100 
Canadians were living with HIV. In recent years deaths from AIDS have 
decreased due to the introduction of antiretroviral drugs, and while there 
appears to be fewer reported HIV/AIDS cases in Native communities, the 
reality is that the percentage of new AIDS diagnoses among Aboriginal 
Canadians has increased by nearly nine percent.

HIV/AIDS continues to affect Aboriginal peoples in a manner 
disproportionate to the rest of the Canadian population.

There are reasons for the increase.

These include higher rates of unprotected sex as illustrated by a 
disproportionate rate of teen pregnancy, higher rates of incarceration 
where the activities that spread HIV are increased, higher rates of drug 
and alcohol abuse, increased mobility and overall lower health and 
socio-economic status.

While HIV/AIDS has long been viewed in Native communities as a disease of 
gay white men and needle users, recent statistics point to Aboriginal women 
as the fastest growing population for HIV/AIDS. The main factor cited is 
intravenous drug use and unprotected sex with infected partners.

As in the United States where the highest growing rates of HIV/AIDS occur 
among African American women in the Washington, DC area for predominately 
the same reasons, the unborn children of these women add to the statistic.

It's hard for those living in the "developed" world to see the threat to 
culture and traditional knowledge in the same way it is recognized in 
developing countries where antiviral drugs are expensive and hard to come 
by and HIV/AIDS education is just beginning.

AIDS is no longer the death sentence it was in the '80s. But HIV/AIDS can 
still threaten Native communities. These drugs are expensive and resources 
in many communities are scarce. Communities have not yet come to terms with 
those living with HIV. Cultures uncomfortable talking about sexual themes 
and a continuing denial that these factors exist continue to contribute to 
the increase.

Those infected with HIV are often stigmatized, prevented from holding 
employment, shunned by family and friends.

Perhaps the greatest solution to HIV/AIDS in Native communities comes from 
within. While there exists great diversity of language, values, customs and 
lifestyles, the basic values among Aboriginal Canadians and Native 
Americans are in many ways similar.

The interdependence long valued in tribal communities instills caring, 
empathy and connection. Programs that incorporate these values and attempt 
to use traditional medicine and spirituality have shown greater success in 
combatting HIV/AIDS. Educating youth and keeping the messages of safe sex 
and abstinence from drugs and alcohol is another strategy.

While many parents find it difficult to counsel their children on these 
issues, depending on school-based education alone means that once the class 
is over, the behaviours begin or continue. Vigilance in keeping the 
messages consistent and frequent counts as an effective way to prevent new 
HIV/AIDS outbreaks.

In December of 2002, Selena Moose, an Inupiat whose family chose to go 
public with the story of her brother who had been infected with AIDS told a 
reporter, "HIV can wipe a village out," At least a quarter of new HIV cases 
in Alaska are among Natives - 16 percent of the entire Alaskan population. 
To Moose, the threat faced by Indigenous Africans didn't seem so remote. 
While most would have borne the burden of her brother's infection in 
silence. Moose was adamant about education the public.

As her brother fought his battle with AIDS at home in the care of family 
and friends, she stoically told an audience at the Alaska Native Heritage 
Center. "We had to tell our people because not telling them means extinction."