Tools to Promote Equity and Best Practices

Randall K. Q. Akee, S. Carroll, C. Ford
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This is the second volume of a two-volume special issue of the American Indian Culture and Research Journal dedicated to the indirect impact of COVID-19 on Indigenous Peoples. The first, 44.2, reports on COVID-19’s extensive impact on Indigenous Peoples and the resulting variety of responses at community and local levels. This second volume, 44.3, provides specific research and insights for improving reporting, identification, and prevention of COVID-19 cases and deaths. Several contributors to this issue respond to the urgent need to ensure, for small populations, and Indigenous Peoples in particular, that data collection provides detailed information on race and tribal nation identifiers. Like this lack of data disaggregation, data inaccuracy also impedes understanding of the impact of a pandemic. Other researchers find that a hallmark of this pandemic—the shift from in-person to virtual interactions in many aspects of life—has clarified that innovative telehealth and virtual methods already underway for Indigenous Peoples may represent the frontiers of better health care, access, and service. “Moving Forward: No Scientific Integrity without an Acknowledgment of Past Wrongs,” a commentary emphasizing the necessary actions the US government must take if progress is to be made, concludes this special issue.
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促进公平的工具和最佳做法
这是《美国印第安人文化与研究杂志》两卷特刊的第二卷,专门讨论新冠肺炎对土著人民的间接影响。第一份是44.2份,报告了新冠肺炎对土著人民的广泛影响以及由此产生的社区和地方层面的各种应对措施。第二卷44.3为改进新冠肺炎病例和死亡的报告、识别和预防提供了具体的研究和见解。这一问题的几个贡献者回应了确保少数人口,特别是土著人民的数据收集提供种族和部落民族识别信息的迫切需要。与缺乏数据分类一样,数据不准确也阻碍了对大流行影响的理解。其他研究人员发现,这场疫情的一个标志——在生活的许多方面从面对面互动转变为虚拟互动——阐明了土著人民已经在进行的创新远程医疗和虚拟方法可能代表着更好的医疗保健、获取和服务的前沿。《向前迈进:不承认过去的错误就没有科学诚信》是一篇评论文章,强调了如果要取得进展,美国政府必须采取的必要行动。
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