Empowering Indigenous Health: The Inaugural Graduates of UND’s Groundbreaking Doctoral Program

2023-11-30 11:30:00

Sit Synnott

The first class of graduates from the University of North Dakota’s Indigenous health doctoral program.

CNN
 —

Cole Allick remembers growing up on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in northern North Dakota and watching his mother struggle to navigate the overburdened and under-resourced health care system.

Allick said his mom, who suffered from lupus and thyroid disease, would often struggle to get appointments with doctors. And her referrals for specialty physicians, he added, were sometimes denied because the Indian Health Service — a federal health agency that serves American Indians and Alaska Natives — didn’t have the funds to cover the appointments.

“There are times when our system runs out of funds to support everyone that may need that specialty care,” Allick said. “That’s where the increased resources for this system needs to happen.”

But, Allick said, those experiences shaped and inspired his career path and in August he graduated with his doctorate in Indigenous health from the University of North Dakota in the program’s inaugural class.

“That was the best decision I’ve made,” Allick said. “It has really refined my interest not only in health systems, but how to use health research as a tool for healthy equity and policy work.”

The Indigenous health doctoral program, which launched in 2020, is the first of its kind in the United States, according to the university’s website, and it was designed to offer students a deeper understanding of the unique health challenges faced by Indigenous communities.

Native Americans often face barriers to medical care, such as lower incomes, inadequate sewage disposal, cultural differences, and geographic isolation on reservations, according to the U.S. Department of Health of Human Services.

The life expectancy for Native Americans is also decreasing. A report from the National Center for Health Statistics found the average life expectancy among Native Americans was 67.9 years in 2022, a modest increase from the previous year’s average of 65.2 years, but down signifanctly from 71.8 years in 2019.

The decrease in life expectancy was exacerbated by the pandemic, the report found. The average life expectancy for all races in the US in 2022 was 77.5 years.

Melanie Nadeauinterim chair of the doctoral program, said the university’s goal is to develop graduates who will go out and connect with Indigenous communities.

“Our students are trained to be systems-level thinkers,” Nadeau said. “We focus a lot on getting to know the community that you’re working with, so that you can understand historically what happened with that community and how we can support and advance their health and wellness.”

Danya Carroll, who also graduated with her doctorate in Indigenous health in August, said she feels the knowledge she gained in the program is essential to providing more culturally competent health care on reservations.

Carroll, who grew up in Navajo Nation and is a member of the White Mountain Apache Tribe, said there is often high turnover and a language barrier with medical professionals who aren’t Native American. Her grandmother, who speaks the Navajo language, often struggled with doctor’s appointments, Carroll said.

“We need our own people in those spaces,” she said. “You just have that understanding when you are from that community.”

Maria Sturm

„You don‘t look Native to me“ is a quote and the title of a body of work, that shows excerpts from the lives of young Native Americans from around Pembroke, Robeson County, North Carolina, where 89% of the city’s population identifes as Native American. The town is the tribal seat of the Lumbee Indian Tribe of North Carolina, the largest state-recognized Native American tribe east of the Mississippi River, which means they are federally unrecognized and therefore have no reservation nor any monetary benefits.
I am tracing their ways of self-representation, transformed through history, questions of identity with which they are confronted on a daily basis, and their reawakening pride in being Native. The work consists of portraits, along with landscapes and places, interiors, still lives, and situations. The aesthetic framework that is presented ofers clues – sometimes subtle, sometimes loud – for imparting a feeling for their everyday lives.
My work engages an unfamiliar mix of concepts: a Native American tribe whose members are ignored by the outside world, who do not wear their otherness on their physique, but who are firm in their identity. Through photography, video and interviews, I am investigating what happens when social and institutional structures break down and people are forced to rely on themselves for their own resources. This raises questions to the viewer regarding one’s own identity and membership to the unspecifed mainstream.
This work was started in 2011.

These portraits show young people who are proud to be Native — even if others don’t see them that way

Carroll said after graduating from the program, she hopes to help build health care systems and promote policies that are more inclusive of Indigenous culture and values.

She is now completing a post-doctoral program at the University of Western Ontario.

Nadeau said graduates from the program are equipped to work in academia, conduct research, and partner with community health programs such as the Indian Health Service.

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death among Native Americans, according to the National Library of Medicine. Allick, who is now a research coordinator and tribal liaison at Washington State University, said one of the disparities he hopes to address through his work is improving access to lung cancer screenings on Indian reservations.

Allick said there needs to be a system that not only makes screenings more accessible but helps identify people who are at higher risk and need to get screened.

“A lot of our communities are deeply rural,” Allick said. “So, if they aren’t being told to get lung cancer screenings, they are not going to go for it. And when they do need it, it’s often a really long drive or the resources aren’t available for them to access it.”

While there is no silver bullet to solving health challenges faced by Indigenous communities, Nadeau said she hopes the doctoral program, with its focus on engaging Native communities and understanding their needs, will be a step in the right direction.

“I am so hopeful,” Nadeau said. “Because our students, they are going to change the world.”

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