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Native Americans Embrace COVID-19 Shots To Protect Families And Culture

Alex Milan Tracy
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Underscore/KLCC

While the U.S. overall is finding its stride with COVID-19 vaccine distribution, some Native American tribes – including in Oregon – are on a mean streak.  Indigenous communities have largely overcome mistrust and logistical challenges that have hampered other efforts. 

When Donna Woods of Keizer died before Thanksgiving last year, it was from a brain aneurysm, not COVID-19.  The pandemic cast its omnipresent shadow over the funeral all the same.

“The Catholic Church in Keizer at that time, was 50 people inside the church, 50 in a different part of the church,” recalled Woods’ surviving sister, Dee Pigsley. “Our family when we have a service, it’s usually around a couple hundred people.”

As chairwoman for the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians (CTSI), Pigsley’s seen the pandemic shutter everything but the tribal health clinic in the past year. This has affected her people’s ability to gather, whether for pow-wows or funerals. 

“We’ve had to tell people they can’t come, because that’s the way it is.”

Credit Alex Milan Tracy / Underscore/KLCC
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Underscore/KLCC
Crystal and Justin Tomlinson wait for any negative reactions after receiving their boosters at a temporary COVID-19 vaccine site organized by the Siletz Community Health Clinic for tribal members and their families in Salem.

But Pigsley is pleased that her tribe is pushing back against the pandemic…through vaccinations. As of early March, the CTSI had inoculated one fourth of enrolled members.  The Chinook Wind Casino has reopened, firing up one of the tribe’s biggest economic engines.  

“Tribes deserve a lot of credit,” said Bryan Mercier, Northwest Regional Director for the Bureau of Indian Affairs.  He said a network of Indian Health Serviceclinics and tight community bonds have boosted vaccination efforts on reservations. He recalls a stark contrast from earlier this year. 

“The Confederated Tribes of Umatilla (Indian Reservation)in Mission, Oregon had done something like 700 shots in arms, when their neighboring county had only done less than ten at that time.”

There are trust issues that go back decades.  Chronic underfunding of the IHS, as well as cases of native women being sterilized without their knowledge or consent, have made many natives wary of government health initiatives. This includes urban Indians, like Se-ah-dom Edmo.  

“Early on in the pandemic, when Seattle Indian Healthwas requesting PPE for residents, they were sent hundreds of body bags,” Edmo recalled.  “While it may have been a mistake, it sent a message about how we’re thought of in terms of the larger, whiter society.”

Edmo lives with her family in the Portland area, where she works as executive director for the MRG Foundation. She told KLCC that Oregon Governor Kate Brown’s prioritization of teachers ahead of seniors for the vaccine troubled native families like hers. 

“Because we live in multigenerational households, there would be no way I would send my children back to school without my parents being vaccinated first,” said Edmo.

“With our elders not prioritized it’s putting our elders at risk if we’re sending our children out to be engaged with folks not in our bubble.”

Brown’s office did not respond to requests for comment. The prioritization was announced in January once state officials learned there was no federal reserve of doses.  As of March 1st, seniors 65 and older across Oregon can be vaccinated. 

Web extra: A check-in at the Coquille Tribe's vaccination clinic in Eugene:

The Oregon Health Authority says that as of March 9, 14,077 people identifying as American Indian or Alaska Native have been vaccinated against COVID-19, 2% of the 750,486 people vaccinated so far. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 1.8% of Oregon’s 4 million residents identify as American Indian or Alaska Native. 

Tribes get their vaccines from either the IHS or state, then set their own priorities outside what other governments do.  An Urban Indian Health Institute survey shows 75 percent of American Indians and Alaska Natives want the COVID-19 vaccine. But 40 percent report having trouble knowing where to go. 

Edmo said the Native Wellness Institute connected her to a Portland vaccine clinic. Other Portland natives, like Tlingit member Vikki Mata, have relied on the so-called “moccasin telegraph” and social media. 

Credit Brian Bull / KLCC
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KLCC
A health worker injects the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine into a ready arm at the Coquille Tribe's March 10, 2021 vaccination clinic.

“For an urban Indian, you have to know where to go to find that information,” said Mata.

“I had learned about Grand Ronde’s clinic because of information that I received anecdotally, on Facebook.”

Mata says a native friend cued her in on regional tribal clinics.  He himself drove from Portland to Pendleton for his COVID shot, hafter aving lost his mother to the coronavirus.   

Some tribes across the Pacific Northwest are inoculating non-tribal members, and those living with Native Americans, such as spouses.  This includes the Coquille Indian Tribe. It’s held vaccine clinics at facilities well beyond Coos Bay, including in Eugene.  

Credit Brian Bull / KLCC
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KLCC
Kelle Little, Health and Human Services Director for the Coquille Indian Tribe, at a vaccination clinic event at the Ko-Kwel clinic in Eugene earlier this month.

“We have provided over 2000 vaccine doses, which is close to 1300 people,” said Kelle Little, Health and Human Services Director for the Coquille at a March 10 event. 

“At this point, we have provided vaccine to over 80 percent of the Coquille tribal elders, and spouses who live within southwestern Oregon.”

And a partnership between the Columbia River Intertribal Fish Commission (CRITFC), One Community Health, and The Next Door has enabled a mobile vaccination van to reach tribal people in the Columbia River Basin. 

“It’s a lot of effort if you’re 200 or 300 miles away from your reservation,” said CRIFC’s  Jeremy FiveCrows, and added that a “brute force” sign-up effort by their partners got folks scheduled for 100 doses at Celilo Falls on the first day. 

FiveCrows said native people are determined to protect their families, elders, and culture. 

“You wonder how much of that is from the cultural memory of how other pandemics swept through the tribal populations and decimated us.”

Variants and other factors may still offset efforts to rein in COVID-19.  But tribal officials like Dee Pigsley are longing for something close to normalcy this summer.  

“I’m hoping that we’re able to have some our tribal events like our pow-wow and our restoration activity,” she said.  “People just wanna get together and shake hands, and give a hug!”  

Support for this coverage comes fromUnderscore, a Portland, Oregon-based public service journalism organization.

Copyright 2021, KLCC.

Brian Bull is an assistant professor of journalism at the University of Oregon, and remains a contributor to the KLCC news department. He began working with KLCC in June 2016.   In his 27+ years as a public media journalist, he's worked at NPR, Twin Cities Public Television, South Dakota Public Broadcasting, Wisconsin Public Radio, and ideastream in Cleveland. His reporting has netted dozens of accolades, including four national Edward R. Murrow Awards (22 regional),  the Ohio Associated Press' Best Reporter Award, Best Radio Reporter from  the Native American Journalists Association, and the PRNDI/NEFE Award for Excellence in Consumer Finance Reporting.
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