Archive for the HEALTH & NUTRITION Category

New Legislation Threatens American-Indian Women’s Reproductive Health

Jul 23rd, 2008 Posted in HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off

New Legislation Threatens American-Indian Women’s Reproductive Health
By Michelle Chen, In These Times
Posted on July 21, 2008, Printed on July 21, 2008
http://www.alternet .org/story/ 92227/
When it comes to their health, American Indian women face extraordinary barriers — from high disease risks to increased incidents of sexual violence. They now face another obstacle, rooted in the political battleground of abortion.

The Senate’s recent passage of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act was a breakthrough for advocacy groups that have long pushed for the bill’s provisions — new programs, improved facilities and funding for the Indian Health Services (IHS) system, which serves about 1.9 million people nationwide.

But the victory is dampened by a poison pill provision slipped in by Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) that explicitly restricts abortions under IHS programs. The amendment was approved along with the bill in February. As In These Times went to press, it was unclear whether the House would vote on companion legislation carrying a similar amendment.

Speaking at a Right to Life rally in January, Vitter boasted that his amendment put “clear, strong, pro-life language in that Indian health-care bill.”

In fact, the amendment mostly replicates an older, more general ban on abortion funding under federal health programs, known as the Hyde Amendment. IHS is already subject to those restrictions, which allow federal financing for abortion only in cases of rape, incest or endangerment of the pregnant woman’s life.

Still, Vitter’s initiative entrenches Hyde’s strictures more firmly by directly changing IHS’s long-term governing statute. Enacted in the late 1970s, Hyde is subject to annual revision when renewed through the appropriations process. It mainly applies to Medicaid, but anti-abortion groups have lobbied to expand its reach in other areas, such as the military and federal prison health systems.

Opponents say Vitter has tethered crucial health programs to an anti-abortion agenda and brazenly targeted Native women’s reproductive rights.

“It’s a race-based amendment, because it’s trying to reduce our right to access abortion more than any other race of women in this country,” says Charon Asetoyer of the Native American Women’s Health Education Resource Center (NAWHERC), a research and advocacy organization.

Critics point to slight differences in the wording of the Vitter amendment that could tighten existing restrictions — for instance, the limitation of the incest exception to women under 18.

Although some states offer separate funding for abortions deemed medically necessary for overall health, Hyde has generally succeeded in raising barriers to abortion for poor women. By making abortion prohibitively costly, the funding restrictions have historically led many women to have abortions later, at greater medical risk, or not at all, according to a study by the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive- health policy group.

The consequences of abortion funding restrictions are uniquely dire in Native communities, where women are disproportionately poor, more likely to be sexually assaulted, and acutely limited in their options for dealing with unplanned pregnancy.

“Native women are so much more vulnerable on so many levels,” says Sarah Deer, a Minnesota-based victim advocacy legal specialist with the Tribal Law & Policy Institute, “from health problems, to being victims of violence, to housing. We’re the ones suffering the most on a lot of different issues.”

According to research by NAWHERC, IHS facilities performed only a handful of abortions over a two-decade period. But the Center has also found that IHS staff routinely failed to properly enforce the Hyde Amendment’s protections for assault survivors. Meanwhile, state health records indicate that Native women in North and South Dakota and Alaska are over-represented among abortion cases compared to their overall state populations, suggesting that many are resorting to private abortion providers.

This isn’t the first time the abortion issue has ensnared Indian Country. In South Dakota, which has an especially high Native population, Asetoyer and other activists campaigned successfully in 2006 against a proposal for a statewide ban on abortions. A similar initiative is up for a referendum vote this November.

But since the Vitter amendment would not dramatically change current abortion policies at IHS, the bigger concern is that it will sink the Native health bill altogether, killing prospects for a much needed funding infusion.That would still be a victory for Vitter, who voted against the bill even with his amendment.

To Kitty Marx, legislative director of the National Indian Health Board, an advocacy group representing Native communities, the health of nearly 2 million American Indians and Alaskan Natives is being subsumed in a political proxy battle.

“[This] is an Indian health-care bill — written by Indians for Indians,” she says. “If Congress wants to have a national debate on abortion, then have it on a national bill.”

Asetoyer says Vitter’s initiative creates a cruel dilemma for activists focused on the intersection between reproductive rights and Native health issues. She continues to support the bill despite the amendment: “We just may have to eat this one, because we cannot use this to stop the bill from going through. Otherwise, we’d end up with no health care at all.”

Michelle Chen’s work has appeared in Extra!, Legal Affairs, City Limits and Alternet, along with her self-published zine, cain.

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JULY 24 FARMERS’ MARKET at WOLVES Den

Jul 23rd, 2008 Posted in HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off

JULY 24 FARMERS’ MARKET at WOLVES Den
Dream of Wild Health will be selling fresh, organic produce at the
Wolves Den, 1201 E. Franklin Avenue, Mpls, on Thursday, July 24, from 10
am to noon. This week Native teens from the Twin Cities will be selling
at low cost freshly picked beans, carrots, mint, spinach, kale, onion
bunches, lettuce mix, sage, cilantro, parsley, basil, cabbage, broccoli,
and zucchini (summer squash). These teens are part of the Garden
Warriors program, a four-week garden apprenticeship that teaches teens
about healthy food, organic gardening, diabetes prevention, and job skills.

/Dream of Wild Health is a 10-acre Native owned and run farm in Hugo,
MN. For more information, visit www.petawakantipi.org./

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Minnesota Indian Women’s Resource Center Workshop

Jul 18th, 2008 Posted in HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off

A Minnesota Indian Women’s Resource

Center Workshop

Title:

“Therapeutic Approaches for Clients Affected by Historical Trauma”

When:

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

9:30 am   – 4:00 pm

Cost:  $40.00

Lunch will be provided

This workshop will take place ‘RAIN or SHINE ‘

Presenters:

Steven M. Smith, Psy.D., L.P.

Rebecca Quintela-Smith, M.A., L.P.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Description:

A Workshop for Therapists, Social Workers, Parent Educators and other Service Providers working with clients affected by recurring trauma and loss in their lives who cannot seem to overcome self-defeating behavior patterns.

This is a day long workshop that will utilize activities with horses to accomplish the learning objectives listed below.

Learning Objectives:

1. Define Historical Trauma and identify its psychological effects

2. Recognize the signs of Historical Trauma in individuals

3. Identify the Cycle of Recurring Trauma & Loss

4. Learn skills to help clients restructure faulty perceptions and cognitions

5. Learn non-verbal techniques for helping clients to stop the Cycle of Recurring Trauma

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

This is a workshop; it is not designed to be a focus group or support group.  We will not be providing any follow-up support for workshop participants.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Endorsement: Fond du Lac Tribal & Community College

Location: Spirit Ranch

13105 177th St. N.

Marine on the St. Croix , MN. 55047

Contact:

Jo Lightfeather @ 612.728.2031 or email: jlightfeather@miwrc.org

The MIWRC Library/Research/Clearinghouse & Training Program is supported by funding from the Minnesota Department of Human Services, Chemical Health Division.”

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A Support Group for Young American Indian Women

Jul 8th, 2008 Posted in HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off

Oskiniigikwe Journey

A Support Group for Young

American Indian Women

(ages 15-21)

The Oskinigiikwe Program focuses on encouraging young       American Indian women to make healthy choices regarding their          mental, physical, emotional and spiritual selves through                    conversations and activities, including:

Beading/Outfit Making,

Crafts,

Healthy Eating & Cooking Classes,

Body Awareness thru yoga/pilates/exercise/self defense

Talking Circles and much, much more….

Group meets Wednesdays from 12-4pm

Referrals and Walk-Ins are welcome

For more information contact Natasha Hilt @ 612.728.2000

Minnesota Indian Womens Resource Center

MIWRC 2300 15th Avenue South , Minneapolis , Minnesota   55404

(Attachments successfully scanned for viruses.)

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Sacred Plants and Migration–

Jul 5th, 2008 Posted in HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off

Chucho Garcia is speaking on Sacred Plants and Migration

What: Presentation and Feast*

*
Where: Minnehaha Park Pavilion


When: Tuesday, July 8th 5pm

**Please bring food to share!
And please spread the word!

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COLUMNIST DORREEN YELLOW BIRD: Hospital’s ’smudging room’ shows sensitivity

Jul 3rd, 2008 Posted in HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off

Subject: Grand Forks Herald; Hospital’s Smuding room shows sensitivity


COLUMNIST DORREEN YELLOW BIRD: Hospital’s ’smudging room’ shows sensitivity
Dorreen Yellow Bird
Grand Forks Herald – 07/02/2008

After traveling across western North Dakota and Montana last year, I was getting used to the brown and sparse landscape. On my trip to Montana last week, I couldn’t take my eyes off the land, particularly the Yellowstone River .

She and her tributaries were running full out — in, places over their banks. Trees were so lush and green that you might have thought it was the Carolinas after a rainy season.

My sister, Gerilyn, and I took turns driving to Little Bighorn Battlefield National Momument in Montana . When it was her turn to drive, I stared at the grassy land rolling by the Toyota . I would catch myself thinking about the days when I rode horseback in grasslands like these. I could almost feel the horse stepping high with the smell of fresh green grass in its nose.

I tried to pick out plants and birds I knew, but it was hard because I intoxicated by the beauty of the grasslands.

And coming back by way of Bismarck , I found something even more surprising, something that said North Dakotans are a caring and sensitive people. It was a smudging room at St. Alexius Medical Center.

Of all of the American Indian ceremonies, one of the most serious deals with illness, dying and death — and that smudging room makes such ceremonies possible in the hospital.

I saw the room when I went to visit my sister, Kaye. She’d had a knee replaced at St. Alexius, a painful but relatively common surgery. She was — as the doctors had told her she would be — in pain after the surgery.

Amazingly, however, she started walking soon after they brought her back to her room. The nurses kept her moving that knee for the rest of her stay in the hospital.

While I was with her, we watched endless “M*A*S*H” episodes and at times while she slept, I dozed, too. And in one of our conversations, she told me about something St. Alexius had added to their hospital and suggested I take a look.

On the first floor as you enter the hospital, there is a large solarium with a tree canopy and plenty of green plants. The room is filled with comfortable chairs; it’s a nice place to come and enjoy solitude.

On the walls are some pictures of famous American Indians. In a tall glass case is a full-length war bonnet — in excellent condition and beautiful. A plaque says the bonnet was donated by a nun.

And off of that big room is a “meditation room,” also called the “smudging room” by locals and American Indians. The room is for smudging and other ceremonies for Indian people at the hospital, my sister said.

How does the hospital handle the ceremonies’ smoke?

The doors to the room seal tightly, and in the center of the room is a big “outtake” fan for the smudge and pipe smoke.

By the way, the doors are made with an Indian design in stained glass by Butch Thunder Hawk, a Standing Rock Lakota man, I was told.

Why have a special room for Indian people? Because many Indian people believe there are special ways to help those who are sick and need healing. Praying is done with the sacred pipe, and smudging is part of it.

The Rev. Julian Nix, chaplain of the St. Alexius Medical Center, is Assiniboine Sioux and has a good understanding of Indian culture. He, along with several other spiritual leaders in the community, worked together get a smudging room for patients at the hospital, my sister told me.

I know how important that room is because when my brother, who had lung cancer, was in need of prayers and ceremony, his hospital made the family take him outside in his wheelchair for smudging. Fortunately, it was warm enough — but a room for ceremony would have helped.

Many of the hospitals in the area accommodate some of the needs of Indian people. When someone is ill, the hospital’s waiting rooms and the patient’s room are filled. When I was in Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis , my doctor and the hospital staff were amazed at the number of people who stayed with me during my procedure.

It is our strong belief that we give strength and healing to the ill person with our prayers and good thoughts. We also try to cheer them with laughter and good feelings.

It seems to work, so special thanks should go out to the people at St. Alexius Medical Center in Bismarck .

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DEPARTMENT OF INDIAN WORKS DIABETES FAIR

Jul 3rd, 2008 Posted in HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off

DEPARTMENT OF INDIAN WORKS DIABETES FAIR  -  ST PAUL AREA COUNCIL OF
CHURCHES
1671 Summit Ave
St paul, MN 55105
(Two blocks west of Snelling Ave at Summit and Pierce
Sts)

JULY 10 –  Thursday

2:30 – 6:30 pm

Diabetes Screenings
Medical providers on hand
Healthy and nutritious snacks
Enter a drawing for prizes

A perfect place to start your goal of controlling your diabetes and also
preventing the onset for family members

Tell your neighbors, friends, and anyone you care about that needs to
be healthy

EVERYONE WELCOME

Fore more information contact:  Mitzie Belliveau at 651 646-8805 ext: 32

FREE  FREE  FREE  FREE  FREE  FREE  FREE  FREE  FREE  FREE

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The American Diabetes Association.

Jun 25th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS, HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off

Action Alert today!  See below.

Yvette Roubideaux MD MPH
Chair, Awakening the Spirit Team
American Diabetes Association

From: American Diabetes Association MakingNoise@diabetes.org
Sent: Wednesday, June 25, 2008 1:32 PM
To: Lisa Foster
Subject: Next Step for Special Diabetes Programs

Read the rest of this entry »

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Act Now For Indian Health

Jun 20th, 2008 Posted in HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off

Action Alert today!  See below.

Yvette Roubideaux MD MPH
Chair, Awakening the Spirit Team
American Diabetes Association

From: American Diabetes Association [mailto:MakingNoise@diabetes.org]
Sent: Wednesday, June 25, 2008 1:32 PM
To: Lisa Foster
Subject: Next Step for Special Diabetes Programs

Dear ,

Good news! Thanks to the ongoing support of Diabetes Advocates like you,
yesterday the U.S. House of Representatives voted 355-59 in support of a
Medicare package that included a two-year extension of the Special
Diabetes
Programs. This is a great step, but we’re not done yet!

The Medicare package will be voted on in the Senate tomorrow, so we
need to keep
up the pressure. Please send a letter to your Senators asking them to
vote in
favor of the Medicare package that includes a two-year extension of the
Special
Diabetes Programs at the National Institutes of Health and the Indian
Health
Service.

Thank you for your tireless efforts this week asking Congress to help
us change
the future of diabetes. Please ask your Senators to fight diabetes by
letting
this vote happen and supporting the Medicare package that includes a
two-year
extension of the Special Diabetes Programs. Click on Take Action Now to
send
your letter.

To Take action, go to this link:

https://secure2.convio.net/adap/site/Advocacy?JServSessionIdr009=9k3zy2m
yd1.app10b&cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=1282

Quoting Yvette Roubideaux MD MPH <yvetter@email.arizona.edu:

SDPI Reauthorization Update

While those of you at the meeting are hearing this in person, I
wanted to make
sure those of you not at the meeting know that today is an important
day for
SDPI Reauthorization – see below

Yvette Roubideaux MD MPH, Chair, Awakening the Spirit Team
American Diabetes Association

From: American Diabetes Association [mailto:MakingNoise@diabetes.org]
Sent: Monday, June 23, 2008 2:18 PM
To: Lisa Foster
Subject: The vote on the Special Diabetes Programs is happening
tomorrow!

Forward to a Friend

Dear  ,

We mentioned this would be a busy week and we have just found out that
the House
of Representatives is expected to vote on the extension of the Special
Diabetes
Programs tomorrow, June 24th, as part of the Medicare package.

As you know, this legislation will extend vitally important funding
for
research
on type 1 diabetes and funding for research, treatment and prevention
programs
for Native Americans populations who are affected by diabetes in
disproportionate numbers. The bill will come up under a “suspension of
the
rules”, a procedure intended to speed up the process and move the
legislation
forward.  It also means that two-thirds of the Members need to vote
for
the bill
for it to pass.

Many of you have already written your Members of Congress on this
issue, but
your voice needs to be heard again!

Help us get closer to a cure! Click on Take Action Now to urge Del.
Norton to
vote in favor of the two year extension of the Special Diabetes
Programs.

Take Action Now!

Quoting Alisa.Katai@UCHSC.edu:

Please forward this information to all program staff attending the
June
Grantee Meeting next week!

Dear Grantees:

We are really looking forward to spending some time with you next
week
at the SDPI Demonstration Projects Grantee Meeting, Year 4 Meeting 2.
Here are a few quick miscellaneous notes to assist you in being
prepared
before you get here.

*    An updated agenda is attached.  Please note that though the
content of the meeting hasn’t changed much, the schedule is different
than previous drafts of the agenda.  Please plan accordingly.

*    In order to get the most out of the Semi-Annual Progress Report
presentation, please review the progress report in detail in the days
prior to the meeting.  Also, please print your own copy of the
General
Progress Report to bring to the meeting so you can easily follow
along
with the presentation.  You can download it from the CC website,
under
Publications on the left navigation bar.  You can also find your
Grantee-Specific Progress Report at the same location.  There will be
ample time for questions and comments following the presentation, so
please make a note of anything you want answered.

*    The continuation application and carry-over issues will be
discussed at this meeting.  Please come prepared with your questions
on
these two issues.

*    Meals reminder: A hot lunch will be provided on Thursday.  On
Wednesday, you are on your own for lunch before the meeting and only
beverages will be provided during the afternoon break.  The bus
leaves
the hotel at 12:00 p.m., so please plan to eat before then.  Please
also
plan to bring your own morning and afternoon snacks for both days if
desired.

*    Gamma grantees’ regular Tuesday data submission is still due the
week of the grantee meeting; however you can send in your electronic
submission on any day of that week.

*    Weather for the week is predicted to be in the mid-to-high 80s,
dry and sunny.

*    Though there is no special evening bus to an area mall just for
grantees this meeting, the hotel runs a free shuttle to the nearby
Northfield Mall.  A shuttle schedule will be provided by the hotel at
check-in.

Safe travels, and we look forward to seeing you next week!

Alisa

__________________________________________________

Alisa D. Katai, MHA

Project Coordinator, Diabetes Prevention Program

IHS SDPI Demonstration Projects Coordinating Center

Nighthorse Campbell Native Health Bldg/MS F800

delivery: 13055 E 17th Ave, First Floor, Aurora CO 80045

mail: PO Box 6508, Aurora CO 80045

p: 303-724-0288  f: 303-724-0332  Alisa.Katai@uchsc.edu

For general questions or when I’m unavailable, please contact

Meghan Berrier  303-724-0426  meghan.berrier@uchsc.edu

For questions on data and forms, please contact:

Jenn Russell  303-724-1422  Jenn.Russell@uchsc.edu

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Experience Soothing Touch

May 17th, 2008 Posted in HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off

Ortho-Bionomy is a gentle, effective, non-invasive style of body/mind therapy. Ortho-Bionomy may help with conditions such as:

Headaches, Auto accident and other injuries, Back pain, Sprains/strains, Knee problems, Acute and chronic pain, stress reduction, Relaxation, Improve flexibility, Neuromuscular dysfunction, Restricted movement.

Sessions held at a Chiropractic health center in St. Paul ( Merriam Park Area )

To schedule an appointment call, Jeanne Hollingsworth at 612-998-5510.

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