Health issues arise in conjunction with poverty. Infant mortality is five times the national rate. The Ogala Lakota Sioux have eight times the national rate for diabetes and five times the rate for cervical cancer. Notably, tuberculosis, a minor disease outside of the reservation, occurs at eight times the national rate. The rate of heart disease is twice the national rate. Pine Ridge has the lowest…
Narrator: Overall, many events in American history has shaped Native people as a whole, but individually they all handled it differently. From the first step in a New World, the Colonists changed how the Native people diversified themselves, adapted to an ever-changing world full of disease, horses, and alcohol, how the Natives organized their society, and how they would be able to remain true to their Native roots without adopting European customs. Each of these tasks was a further step for a colonial foothold in Indian America.…
Food and water are essential to everyday life. For Native Americans, acquiring food and water was difficult, especially with the interference by white settlers. The two documentaries, "Good Meat" and "Bad Sugar" talk about how diabetes has become common amongst the Native American tribes. Throughout the discussion, I will analyze the health problems that Native Americans face on a daily basis, how those problems started, and what is being done to fix these problems.…
First off, their populations were drastically decreased by up to 90% due to diseases like smallpox and poor treatment from the colonizing people such as the Spaniards. This major change happened because the Native Americans had never been involved in any major trade so their immune system could not fight diseases like the Europeans could. The Native Americans also experienced poor treatment from explorers because they did not have the technology necessary to defend themselves against invaders who had gunpowder and metal armor. Since the Europeans saw that they were stronger than some American civilizations, or saw that they could take them down easily, they completely changed the natives ways of life by putting the into slavery and using them as free labor. All this treatment was so bad that many indians died and in the 16th Century was labelled as the Great…
The Native Americans were hopelessly outnumbered by the whites. The Native Americans had lacked modern farming techniques. The Native Americans had also lacked political unity. The whites had more power than the Native Americans. Native American had lost their reign to their land.…
The native americans devastated their land with war, the journey to the east was a long and harsh journey, and the native americans were forced out of their land that they lived their for hundreds of years. This all impacted the native americans negatively. The settlers were bad people for kicking innocent native americans out of their own land just to mine for gold. The westward expansion had a lot of bloodshed throughout the whole time period were the native americans had to…
References: White, R. (2011). Problems Facing Native Americans in the Modern World. Retrieved from http://robwrite.hubpages.com/…
American Indians and Alaska Natives face persistent disparities in health and health care, including high uninsured rates, significant barriers to obtaining needed care, and poor health status (2013). The most common standard applied for eligibility for health services from the Indian Health Service is that the individual is an enrolled member of a Federally recognized Tribe (2016).…
Sherman Alexie, author of the novel Reservation Blues, explains that at the start of an Indian’s life on a reservation, he or she is destined to be hopeless. First, parental guidance is infrequent leaving many infant Indians with an insufficient childhood. After that, Indian children experience poor education revolved around heaps of stereotyping and bullying from their white classmates and teachers. Next, any sort of entertainment such as television, music, and books are extremely rare. Then leaving their life with a lack of stability and sustainability, an Indian grows up on a reservation with little to no job opportunity. On top of that, reservations are subjected to commodity food; food hardly sufficient and plentiful enough to satisfy a human’s basic needs. All of these factors fill the lives on the reservation with despair, causing most Indians to indulge in alcohol, violence, and suicide. And so, hopelessness within modern Native Americans ultimately leads to self destructive behavior.…
Native Americans believe that in order to stay strong and healthy, they have to keep a strong spiritually, mentally, and physically. If you stay true to the Native traditions, beliefs and obey tribal religious tenets you will maintain healthy living. One of the way that this can be achieved is by treating all life with respect. Treating animals, plants, rocks, rivers, rainbows, ect, with the up most respect for this beings. The spirit is a representation of your physical body, and Native Americans believe that each and every person is responsible for their own health and well being. There are some primary tools that Native Americans use to help them maintain the balance between good and bad harmony in their lives. (1)…
Two major societal factors that have contributed possibly to the health outcomes of Native Americans are discrimination and poverty. For many generations, Native Americans have been coerced to vacate their lands leaving behind culture and traditions stripping away their communal pride. They have been huddled to rural impoverished areas causing them detrimental physical and psychiatric health effects.…
The native people constantly experience neglect from the government, it was recorded that the mortality rate of the natives were higher compare to other Canadians. Nobody care that their babies were dying, water the primary source of livelihood were often poisoned with chemicals and yet no provision was made…
As soon as settlers came they pushed Native American out of their land in order to control it as their own. Native Americans tried to fight back but this was a very difficult task because they were unarmed and didn’t have the weaponry that the English had. Native Americans were killed and were also forced to work for the English. The Native American population was decreased dramatically due to the brutal treatment from colonist along with different diseases they brought overseas like small pox. Native Americans lived all across America and would move from place to place after their land and homes were colonized. Native Americans are heavily populated in the Colorado and Oklahoma areas but nonetheless still have a population that has decreased dramatically over the years. In areas like Mississippi, West Virginia, and Kentucky there is not a large population of Native Americans. In today’s society many Native Americans live on Reservations which are areas of land managed by Native Americans under different polies set by the United States. On this land Native Americans are able to make their own rules to follow to a certain extent. Native Americans allow gambling which makes a lot of money for the reservations because gambling is not legal in the United States. These reservations are located in abundance in the Colorado and Oklahoma…
The native American weren’t used to this lifestyle. The Native Americans exist on a malnourishing diet, these factors stated above would affect their ability to sustain even that low level of nutrition…
This could be due to the fact that Native American medicine is based upon a spiritual view of life. A healthy person is someone who has a sense of purpose and follows the guidance of the Great Spirit who represented the central religious figure for most tribes (Chrisman 2). It is believed that someone is unhealthy because they have done something morally wrong, or not within their culture 's boundaries of what is deemed acceptable. If the tribe member did do something wrong, often they would not receive medical treatment because it was believed that they were learning a lesson as a direct result of their actions. Native American tradition of how they view health is just one of many possible answers to why so many have failing health. Along with their traditional culture, hopelessness, poverty and lack of education contribute more or less to the Native American population health status.…