11/07/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 11/07/2024 08:37
One of AHRQ's most valuable contributions is its abiding scrutiny of inequities in healthcare delivery. Its National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report, published annually for over two decades, is the Nation's most comprehensive assessment of disparities. The report elucidates the longstanding inequities experienced by American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities.
AI/AN communities have a life expectancy ranging from 45 to 65 years of age, 10 to 30 years less than the general U.S. population, depending on the location. That startling reminder of inequality exemplifies why a presentation on AI/AN infant and maternal health trends at AHRQ's recent National Advisory Council for Healthcare Research and Quality meeting was so essential.
This presentation called our attention to staggering divides in health outcomes. It revealed that AI/AN women are more than twice as likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than non-Hispanic white women. Furthermore, 93 percent of AI/AN pregnancy-related deaths are considered preventable. We also learned that mental health is a serious issue, with 31 percent of maternal deaths related to suicide or poisoning. This crisis mirrors data for the AI/AN population as a whole; the suicide rate for AI/AN people is 91 percent greater than the general population, sadly illuminating how the social injustices in which AI/AN communities live matter to psychological pain and suffering.
Our national commitment to eliminating health disparities and promoting health equity must apply to the AI/AN population, which comprises 9.7 million Americans. This is not only the right thing to do; a specific legal obligation is to fulfill the "trust responsibility," the legal doctrine of "an undisputed existence of a general trust relationship between the United States and the Indian people." This responsibility carries special obligations to provide healthcare and education, protect tribal lands, and keep promises made in nearly 400 treaties between 1787 and 1871.
Addressing AI/AN health disparities is not the sole responsibility of the Indian Health Service. All federal agencies bear the responsibility to act. AHRQ, with the mission of improving healthcare for all by producing evidence to make healthcare of higher quality so that it is safer, patient-centered, timely, effective, accessible, efficiently provided, and equitably distributed, sits in a unique position to contribute to fulfilling the trust responsibility.
What is AHRQ's role in improving AI/AN health? We offer three suggestions:
At our National Advisory Council meeting, we heard loud and clear that more needs to be done to address tribal health inequities within the context of respecting tribal sovereignty and data sovereignty. We are pleased with AHRQ's support of AI/AN health and look forward to helping the agency consider new strategies to close the wide gaps in care and outcomes.
Peter Angood is chief executive officer and president of the American Association for Physician Leadership. Mason Emert, an enrolled member of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, is Choctaw Nation's tribal epidemiologist. Sharon Weidner Hickman is founding principal and president of ChangeZen Consulting. Sinsi Hernández-Cancio is vice president for health justice for the National Partnership for Women & Families.
Get more AHRQ news, sign up for AHRQ news via email and follow AHRQ on X, LinkedIn, Facebook, and YouTube.