Indigenous Americans hit harder by COVID-19: CDC report

Incidence of confirmed COVID-19 cases among Native Americans 3.5 times that of non-Hispanic whites, report shows.

Alaska natives
Alaska Natives getting ready in advance of a ceremony in honour of the arrival of Census Bureau Director Steven Dillingham in Toksook Bay, Alaska [AP Photo/Gregory Bull]

Native Americans and Alaska Natives have been hit harder by COVID-19 than the US white population and have been more likely to become infected by the novel coronavirus at a younger age, a US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report showed on Wednesday.

The incidence of laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases among people identified as Native Americans or Alaska Natives was 3.5 times that of non-Hispanic whites, making them one of the racial and ethnic minority groups at highest risk, according to the study based on data from 23 US states from January 22 to July 3.

The data also showed that those testing positive for the coronavirus tended to be younger than white non-Hispanic people with COVID-19. The researchers found that 12.9 percent of infections among Native Americans or Alaska Natives were in people under age 18, compared with 4.3 percent among non-Hispanic whites.

Robert Redfield
The CDC said it has provided $200m in funding to support tribes and tribal organisations in carrying out COVID-19 preparedness and response activities [Graeme Jennings/Pool via Reuters] 

The study added to a growing body of evidence that long-standing health and social inequities have resulted in an increased risk for infection and death from COVID-19 among Native American and Alaska Native populations, the CDC researchers said.

Other factors such as reliance on shared transportation, limited access to running water and household size could increase the risk of virus transmission, the researchers added.

“American Indian and Alaska Native people have suffered a disproportionate burden of COVID-19 illness during the pandemic,” CDC Director Robert Redfield said in a statement.

The CDC said it has provided $200m in funding to support tribes and tribal organisations in carrying out COVID-19 preparedness and response activities.

Source: Reuters