A Medicine Garden (health)

A medicine garden

A few herbalists keep alive ancient knowledge of plants

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Robin Chenoweth

FOR THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

The town drunk likely earned his nickname by panhandling small change to buy his next bottle of hooch. Everyone knew Fifty-Cent Freddie was dancing a two-step with death. But something compelled him to go to the herbal healer who lived in the mountains overlooking Bluefield, W.Va.

Seeing her grandmother treat Freddie with valerian root and skullcap jostled something in young Sarah Brown’s consciousness.

"I remember that so clearly," said Brown, who lives in the Hilltop area. "She helped him come off alcohol because it was killing him. Anybody who came, my grandmother helped."

Even as a child who ran barefoot and worry-free through the hills, Brown was marked to pass down a tradition of healing that predates recorded civilization.

The roots of that tradition, grafted from ancient African and American Indian cultures, grow deep in Brown’s garden.

"You are born and die an herbalist," Brown said. "It’s a continuous study. . . . It takes years to master."

Plants such as Saint-John’s-wort, plantain, comfrey and lemon balm nestle in Brown’s tightly planted beds. She picks the herbs and brews them or makes them into salves, just as her grandmother did.

Others taught her grandmother the herbal way, and before them were others.

Some consider the tradition lost, except that it isn’t: More than 80 percent of the world uses medicinal plants to heal and maintain health, said James Duke, an ethnobotanist who has studied plants throughout the world.

"Man has been experimenting with herbs as long as man has been here," Duke said. "There have been people in India and China for 1 million years and (people) in Africa for 8 million years.

"The longer they’ve had to evolve with these (plants), the better their genes recognize them. . . . We’ve had less than 200 years with synthetic medicine."

Many modern drugs, in fact, are derived from medicinal plants or are modeled biochemically after them.

The indigenous plant black cohosh, for example, is used to treat menopause in the prescription drug Remifemin; compounds from rosy periwinkle help cure 90 percent of childhood leukemia.

But much of nature’s medicine chest remains untapped.

Most drug trials on herbs are conducted in Europe. In the United States, herbalists are barred from diagnosing illness or prescribing herbs. And many doctors are skeptical of their claims.

"The cautionary push-back for most physicians is that our market for herbs and dietary supplements is horribly under-, said Dr. Brent - Bauer, director of the Mayo Clinic’s Complementary and Integrated Medicine Program.

The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 made manufacturers responsible for ensuring the safety of their products. Since then, variations in the quality of herbs have been huge from brand to brand, he said.

"I can basically go out in my backyard, squeeze up some grass clippings, call it Dr. Bauer’s Miracle Prostate Cure and pretty much go to the market," he said.

A few supplements, such as ephedra, have been pulled off the market by the Food and Drug Administration because studies indicate health threats. (FDA officials were contacted several times regarding this story but declined to be interviewed.)

The validity of such studies often are hotly debated by people such as Duke, who believes herbal treatments are safer, cheaper and more effective than their synthetic counterparts. He maintains that each year synthetic drugs, taken as prescribed in a hospital setting, kill at least 140,000 Americans.

Duke, who retired from the U.S. Department of Agriculture after 30 years of tracking down medicinal plants, is fighting to have synthetic drugs tested against herbal alternatives.

Indeed, the tide might be shifting as medical institutions conduct more studies on herbs. The Mayo Clinic is studying how valerian — the same herb Brown’s grandmother used — affects fatigue in cancer patients. The University of Illinois is running drug trials on black cohosh and red clover. Other government-funded studies are under way.

"But it’s a difficult area," said Dr. Norman Farnsworth, a pharmaceutical researcher at the University of Illinois. "Some of the government-sponsored trials have failed" because plant extracts, which vary greatly from batch to batch, have not been correctly standardized.

Nevertheless, health-care professionals must consider alternative medicines in their many forms, said Bauer, because 60 percent of people are using them.

"If the majority have this as part of their health-care program, it’s not an alternative anymore. So we absolutely have to be a lot more savvy."

Meanwhile, Brown and other herbalists continue to bear a stigma.

"The bane of my existence is being the ‘voodoo queen,’ especially being black and an herbalist," she said.

"If I could just get past that image. This is not a carnival. This is very serious stuff . . . because we’re trying to help the way we’ve been helped."

Brown has pored over botanical texts and studied herbal guides published by Commission E, an arm of Germany’s federal drug agency.

But her grandmother began Brown’s lessons simply, as she had learned them, with herbs that grew in the woods surrounding their home.

"(She) said, ‘You’re going to become an expert at 10 herbs in front of you,’ " Brown recalled, plants such as dandelion root, red clover and goldenrod.

"If you had a cold, you’d go out there and get comfrey, mullein, yarrow — your wayside weeds."

Because they were poor and lived in an area accessible only by steep dirt roads, herbs often were the only treatment available. In her grandmother’s day, blacks were barred from white hospitals. So they continued the traditional healing that their ancestors brought over on slave ships.

"There was more than hair underneath the scarves that the slave women wore," Brown said. "They had herbs and roots and things to help heal people."

The West Virginia mountains also harbored many eastern Cherokee Indians, who fled there to escape going west on the Trail of Tears.

The escapees survived by marrying whites and blacks, and they passed on Indian medicine. That blending of herbal lore is prevalent throughout the world, Duke said.

"Whenever cultures mix, their herbal traditions get mixed," he said.

One of Brown’s favorite herbs, plantain, was called White Man’s Footsteps by Native Americans because it spread wherever white explorers went.

Shamans and healers worldwide made good use of plantain, which has been clinically proven to treat certain eye, throat and mouth infections. It is also a proven diuretic, which is no surprise to Brown, who has seen the herb cure kidney ailments.

"It’s so frustrating being an herbalist," she said. "We know these things work; it’s just hard trying to convince people.

"Herbalism is folk art, oldwives’ tales passed down, it’s true. But right now it is being scientifically proven."

She frets about the health of the 20 percent of Americans who can’t afford drugs or doctors to prescribe them.

"Herbs are the medicines of everyday man," she said. "You have choices. You can go ahead and suffer, or you might want to, for example, take some tea from this leaf."

Standing among her plants, she crushed some thyme and smelled its fragrance.

"Since the beginning of time, this information has been passed; we have just gotten away from it," she said.

"A lot of people are destroyed by a lack of knowledge."

Native America Calling (media)

This week on Native America Calling, http://www.nativeamericacalling.com/

Native America Calling Airs Live Monday - Friday, 1-2pm Eastern

To participate call: 1-800-996-2848, that's 1-800-99-NATIVE

 

Monday, October 21, 2013 – Winter Storytelling 
Winter is approaching fast. In many Native American and Alaska Native communities, that means it's time for winter storytelling. Historically an elder of the tribe gathers everyone around the fire or dinner table to share a favorite story. What stories did you hear growing up? What stories do you want to pass along to your children or grandchildren? How can stories help a tribe maintain its cultural knowledge? Guests include Choogie Kingfisher (United Band of Keetooah Cherokee) Storyteller, Elaine Grinnell (Jamestown S’Klallam) Storyteller.

Break Music: How Did You Find a Partner (song) Navajo Nation Swingers (artist) Waiting With the Cellular (album)

Tuesday, October 22, 2013 – Teach This! 
Each year in November, teachers organize lessons and events for American Indian and Alaska Native Heritage month. Some teachers include the “Heroes and Holidays” approach to teaching about Native Americans, where Natives are highlighted for a holiday (Thanksgiving) or a famous person like Sitting Bull. Is this the best way to teach Native history? Could other approaches be better for both Native and non-Native students? We will bring you several perspectives on how teachers can turn lesson plans into unique new learning experiences. Guests include: Vincent Schilling (St. Regis Mohawk), journalist and author.

Break Music: Nose Flute Dub (song) Paula Fuga (artist) Lilikoi (album)

Wednesday, October 23, 2013 – Keystone XL 
The controversial Keystone XL pipeline is actually several different pipeline projects. Some sections have already been built. Many tribes and organizations have raised concerns over the project. The pipeline has yet to be approved by the Obama administration and activists are drawing attention to issues like the safety of the Oglala aquifer, protecting sacred places, and the heavy crude oil being transferred through the pipeline. Where do you stand on the Keystone XL pipeline? Will the pipeline go through or near your community? Do you already have parts of the pipeline in your area? What’s at stake for Native America in debates over the Keystone XL pipeline?

Break Music: Testimony (album) Robbie Robertson (artist) Robbie Robertson (album))

Thursday, October 24, 2013 – Indigenous Identity in the Americas: 
Identity is a major issue in Native America. It can also be controversial in discussions about who can call themselves Native. Identity consists of three main tiers - external, community and self-identification. Today we turn our focus on what Indigenous identity means for our brothers and sisters from Central and South America and the Caribbean. How do individuals with Indigenous roots embrace their Native identity? What happens when Indigenous expression is celebrated out in the open? Does saying you are Native in the southern hemisphere garner the same reaction as it does when you say you are Native in the United States?

Break Music: Zapata se queda (song) Lila Downs (artist) Pecados (album)

Friday, October 25, 2013 – Book of the Month: “Native American DNA”
In her new book, “Native American DNA,” Native author Kim Tallbear (Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate) takes a look at the growing field of racial science and DNA testing. She has followed the rise of DNA testing and raises some unique questions for Native America about identity. In the book, she also explores what DNA testing could mean for future generations, including the possibility of undermining claims to land, resources and sovereignty. How much weight would you put on DNA testing to determine Native American ancestry? Could calling on science to identify your Nativeness be troublesome down the road for you or your tribe?

Break Music: Crane (song) Pamyua (artist) Caught In The Act (album)

Why Can't I be a Native Hipster? (cultural appropriation)

I’ve posted a lot about the phenomenon that is the hipster headdress (see here, here, and here), but I’ve never really broken it down as to why this trend is so annoying and effed up. A lot of this will be review and is repeated elsewhere on the site, but I thought it was high time I pulled things together into a one-stop-anti-headdress shop. Much of this can also apply to any of the “tribal trends” I feature here, and you can also consider this a follow up to my “Cultural Appropriation Bingo” post. The many sources I drew from are included at the end of this post.

So why can’t I wear it? 

Headdresses promote stereotyping of Native cultures.

The image of a warbonnet and warpaint wearing Indian is one that has been created and perpetuated by Hollywood  and only bears minimal resemblance to traditional regalia of Plains tribes. It furthers the stereotype that Native peoples are one monolithic culture, when in fact there are 500+ distinct tribes with their own cultures. It also places Native people in the historic past, as something that cannot exist in modern society. We don’t walk around in ceremonial attire everyday, but we still exist and are still Native.

Headdresses, feathers, and warbonnets have deep spiritual significance.

The wearing of feathers and warbonnets in Native communities is not a fashion choice. Eagle feathers are presented as symbols of honor and respect and have to be earned. Some communities give them to children when they become adults through special ceremonies, others present the feathers as a way of commemorating an act or event of deep significance. Warbonnets especially are reserved for respected figures of power. The other issue is that warbonnets are reserved for men in Native communities, and nearly all of these pictures show women sporting the headdresses. I can’t read it as an act of feminism or subverting the patriarchal society, it’s an act of utter disrespect for the origins of the practice. (see my post on sweatlodges for more on the misinterpretation of the role of women). This is just as bad as running around in a pope hat and a bikini, or a Sikh turban cause it’s “cute”.  

It’s just like wearing blackface.

“Playing Indian” has a long history in the United States, all the way back to those original tea partiers in Boston, and in no way is it better than minstral shows or dressing up in blackface. You are pretending to be a race that you are not, and are drawing upon stereotypes to do so. Like my first point said, you’re collapsing distinct cultures, and in doing so, you’re asserting your power over them. Which leads me to the next issue.

There is a history of genocide and colonialism involved that continues today.

By the sheer fact that you live in the United States you are benefiting from the history of genocide and continued colonialism of Native peoples. That land you’re standing on? Indian land. Taken illegally so your ancestor who came to the US could buy it and live off it, gaining valuable capital (both monetary and cultural) that passed down through the generations to you. Have I benefited as well, given I was raised in a white, suburban community? yes. absolutely. but by dismissing and minimizing the continued subordination and oppression of Natives in the US by donning your headdress, you are contributing to the culture of power that continues the cycle today.

But I don’t mean it in that way, I just think it’s cute!

Well hopefully I’ve illuminated that there’s more at play here than just a “cute” fashion choice. Sorry for taking away your ignorance defense. 

But I consider it honoring to Native Americans!

I think that this cartoon is a proper answer, but I’ll add that having a drunken girl wearing a headdress and a bikini dancing at an outdoor concert does not honor me. I remember reading somewhere that it was also “honoring the fine craftsmanship of Native Americans”. Those costume shop chicken feather headdresses aren’t honoring Native craftsmanship. And you will be very hard pressed to find a Native artist who is closely tied to their community making headdresses for sale. See the point about their sacredness and significance.

I’m just wearing it because it’s “ironic”!

I’m all for irony. Finger mustaches, PBR, kanye glasses, old timey facial hair, 80′s spandex–fine, funny, a bit over-played, but ironic, I guess. Appropriating someone’s culture and cavorting around town in your skinny jeans with a feathered headdress, moccasins, and turquoise jewelry in an attempt to be ‘counterculture’? Not ironic. If you’re okay with being a walking representative of 500+ years of colonialism and racism, or don’t mind perpetuating the stereotypes that we as Native people have been fighting against for just as long, by all means, go for it. But by embracing the current tribal trends you aren’t asserting yourself as an individual, you are situating yourself in a culture of power that continues to oppress Native peoples in the US. And really, if everyone is doing it, doesn’t that take away from the irony? am I missing the point on the irony? maybe. how is this even ironic? I’m starting to confuse myself. but it’s still not a defense.

Stop getting so defensive, it’s seriously just fashion!

Did you read anything I just wrote? It’s not “just” fashion. There is a lot more at play here. This is a matter of power and who has the right to represent my culture. (I also enjoy asking myself questions that elicit snarky answers.) 

What about the bigger issues in Indian Country? Poverty, suicide rates, lack of resources, disease, etc? Aren’t those more important that hipster headdresses?

Yes, absolutely. But, I’ll paraphrase Jess Yee in this post, and say these are very real issues and challenges in our communities, but when the only images of Natives that Americans see are incorrect, and place Natives in the historic past, it erases our current presence, and makes it impossible for the current issues to exist in the collective American consciousness. Our cultures and lives are something that only exist in movies or in the past, not today. So it’s a cycle, and in order to break that cycle, we need to question and interrogate the stereotypes and images that erase our current presence–while we simultaneously tackle the pressing issues in Indian Country. They’re closely linked, and at least this is a place to start.   

Well then, Miss Cultural Appropriation Police, what CAN I wear?

If you choose to wear something Native, buy it from a Native. There are federal laws that protect Native artists and craftspeople who make genuine jewelry, art, etc. (see info here about The Indian Arts and Crafts Act). Anything you buy should have a label that says “Indian made” or “Native made”. Talk to the artist. find out where they’re from. Be diligent. Don’t go out in a full “costume”. It’s ok to have on some beaded earrings or a turquoise ring, but don’t march down the street wearing a feather, with loaded on jewelry, and a ribbon shirt. Ask yourself: if you ran into a Native person, would you feel embarrassed or feel the need to justify yourself? As commenter Bree pointed out, it’s ok to own a shirt with kimono sleeves, but you wouldn’t go out wearing full kabuki makeup to a bar. Just take a minute to question your sartorial choices before you go out.       

…and an editorial comment:  I should also note that I have absolutely nothing against hipsters. In fact, some would argue I have hipster-leaning tendencies. In my former San Francisco life, had been known to have a drink or two in the clouds of smoke outside at Zeitgeist, and enjoyed shopping on Haight street. I enjoy drinking PBR out of the can when I go to the dive bars near my apartment where I throw darts and talk about sticking it to ‘The Man’. I own several fringed hipster scarves, more than one pair of ironic fake ray-ban wayfarers, and two plaid button downs. I’m also not trying to stereotype and say that all hipsters do/wear the above, just like not every hipster thinks it’s cool to wear a headdress. So, I don’t hate hipsters, I hate ignorance and cultural appropriation. There is a difference. Just thought I should clear that up.

This manifesto draws heavily from these awesome posts:

A l’allure garçonnière: The Critical Fashion Lovers (basic) guide to Cultural Appropriation

Threadbared: LINKAGE: The Feather In Your “Native” Cap

Racialicious: Some Basic Racist Ideas and Some Rebuttals & Why We Exist

GSU Signal: Mockery of Native heritage only perpetuates Native issues

Bitch Magazine: Ke$ha and the ongoing cultural appropriation and sexualization of Native women

Bitch Magazine/Racialicious: On Hipster/Hippies and Native Native Arts & Cultures Blue Foundation

Urgency to Improve Native Student Achievement

New Brief Underscores Urgency to Improve Native Student Achievement

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WASHINGTON (August 13, 2013) — Despite recent progress in improving achievement among students of color, achievement results for Native students have remained nearly flat. As performance has stagnated, the gaps separating Native students from their white peers have mostly widened.

A new brief from The Education Trust, “The State of Education for Native Students,” finds that schools aren’t performing nearly well enough for Native students – defined as American Indian and Alaska Native students. In 2011, only 18 percent of Native fourth-graders were proficient or advanced in reading on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), compared with 42 percent of white fourth-graders. In math, only 17 percent of Native eighth-graders were proficient or advanced, and nearly half (46 percent) performed below even the basic level. For white students, the pattern was almost exactly the reverse, with 17 percent below basic and 43 percent proficient or advanced.

This low achievement for Native students is coupled with little to no improvement over time. In fact, NAEP results for Native students improved more slowly between 2005 and 2011 than for any other major ethnic group. As a result, while Native students were performing better in fourth-grade reading and eighth-grade math than African American and Latino students in 2005, by 2011 that lead had all but disappeared.

“Our country’s focus on raising achievement for all groups of students has left behind one important group – Native students,” said Kati Haycock, president of The Education Trust. “To ensure that all Native students succeed, we must do more and better for them starting now.”

Achievement for Native students has continued to lag in higher education as well. Of the Native students who enrolled in a four-year college in the fall of 2004, only 39 percent completed a bachelor’s degree within six years, the lowest graduation rate for any group of students.

These trends are not inevitable. Schools like Calcedeaver Elementary in Mobile County, Alabama – where 80 percent of students are American Indian – prove that Native students, like all other students, can achieve at high levels. Calcedeaver combines high expectations with rigorous instruction that aims to help students understand their heritage. The results? In 2012, 61 percent of Calcedeaver’s sixth-graders scored at the advanced level in math on Alabama’s state assessment, as compared with only 35 percent of sixth-graders statewide.

And although no state is doing as well as it should for Native students, some states are doing better than others. In 2011, the percent of students reaching proficient or advanced levels on NAEP in fourth-grade reading, for example, was at least three times higher in Oregon and Oklahoma than in Alaska and Arizona.

“There’s an urgent need to pick up the pace of improvement for Native students in this country,” said Natasha Ushomirsky, Ed Trust senior data and policy analyst and author of the brief. “Some states, schools, and institutions of higher education are already working hard to ensure progress for Native students. We need to understand what they are doing right and use those strategies to improve outcomes for Native students around the country.”

Tobacco Use & Natives (health)

http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/research/factsheets/pdf/0251.pdf

 1400 I Street, NW - Suite 1200 ·  Washington, DC 20005
Phone (202) 296-5469 ·  Fax (202) 296-5427 ·  www.tobaccofreekids.org
Despite reductions in smoking prevalence achieved since the first Surgeon General’s report on
the consequences of smoking in 1964, smoking remains the leading cause of preventable death
in the United States.1 Smoking accounts for more than 400,000 deaths in the United States
each year, and is a major risk factor for the four leading causes of death: heart disease, cancer,
stroke, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.2 Native Americans, as a whole, have an
especially high risk of suffering from tobacco-related death and disease because they have the
highest prevalence of smoking and other tobacco use compared to any other population group
in the United States.

Smoking Among Native American Adults
While smoking rates vary considerably from one tribe to another, American Indians and Alaska
Natives (AI/AN) are, overall, more likely than any other racial/ethnic subgroup to be current
smokers. According to the 2011 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) of adults ages 18 and
over, 31.5 percent of AI/AN currently smoke, compared to 20.6 percent of Whites, 19.4 percent
of African Americans, 12.9 percent of Hispanics and 9.9 percent of Asian Americans. Overall,
19 percent of U.S. adults are current smokers.3 According to a 2005 study, 14 percent of
Southwest tribal members were smokers compared to a 50 percent smoking rate among
Northern Plains tribal members.4

The 2011 NHIS reports that AI/AN men have the highest smoking prevalence of all racial/ethnic
groups at 34.4 percent. In comparison, the smoking prevalence is 24.2 percent among African
American men and 22.5 percent among white men.5 The smoking prevalence among AI/AN
women also is disproportionately high. 29.1 percent of AI/AN women smoke, compared to 18.8
percent of white women and 15.5 percent of African-American women.6

According to the National Center for Health Statistics, 17.8 percent of AI/AN women smoked
during their pregnancy, compared to 13.9 percent of non-Hispanic white women.7 This disparity
has been growing over time. Since 1978, the prevalence of cigarette smoking in women of
reproductive age (18 to 44 years old) has declined in every subgroup of the American
population except among AI/AN women.8 Tobacco use during pregnancy is one of the key
preventable causes of adverse pregnancy outcomes.

Smoking Among Native American Youth
In 2001, cigarette use among high school students in National Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA)
funded schools was 56.5 percent, almost double the smoking prevalence rate among all U.S.
high school students (28.5%).9 There was no significant difference between smoking rates
among AI/AN boys and girls. Almost one-quarter (24.4%) of students at BIA-funded schools
reported frequent cigarette use (having smoked ≥ 20 of the 30 days preceding the survey).10 In
comparison, 13.8 percent of all U.S. high school students reported frequent cigarette use
2001.11 BIA funds 185 schools located on 63 reservations in 23 states with approximately 8,500
high school students.12

Native Americans and Other Tobacco Use
While good current data is not available, data from the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS,
1991) indicate that prevalence of smokeless tobacco use has been highest among AI/AN men

NATIVE AMERICANS & TOBACCO USE
Native Americans & Tobacco Use / 2
and women, compared to other racial/ethnic subgroups. 5.4 percent of AI/AN adults (8.1% of
men and 2.5% of women) were current smokeless tobacco users, compared to 2.9 percent for
the overall U.S population (5.6% of men and 0.6% of women).13

According to aggregated data from the 1987 and 1991 NHIS, the prevalence of current pipe and
cigar use has also been higher among AI/AN than among other racial/ethnic subgroups.
However, the NHIS did not distinguish between ceremonial and addictive daily pipe smoking
which may contribute to the higher prevalence rates among this group.14

Nationally, Native American youth living on reservations have the highest smokeless tobacco
use than any other group. Again, these children seem to have early, frequent and heavy use of
chewing tobacco and snuff.15 In 2001, approximately 1 in 5 AI/AN students in BIA funded
schools were current users of smokeless tobacco,16 compared to 1 in 12 students at all U.S.
high schools.17

Tobacco Use Health Consequences Among Native Americans
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death among AI/ANs, and tobacco use is an
important risk factor.18 Cancer is the second leading cause of death among AI/ANs nationally
and the leading cause of death among Alaska Natives; lung cancer is the leading cause of
cancer death.19

Alaska and Northern Plains tribal members, who have the highest smoking prevalence among
American Indians, also have the highest rates of lung cancer and heart disease.20 From 1994–
1998, rates of lung cancer death among AI/ANs in the North Plains and Alaska regions were
higher than the U.S. rate for all racial/ethnic populations combined.21

The 2007 annual report on the status of cancer in the U.S. found that there is wide variation in
AI/AN cancer surveillance, and that regional and tribe-specific data is needed to fully
understand the disease burden among Indian tribes. Regional and tribal variations in cancer
rates likely reflect geographic and tribal variations in risk factors and screening. For example,
among AI/AN, regional lung cancer rates mirrored regional smoking prevalence rates.22
Recommendations for lowering the high rate of smoking-caused cancer included reducing
tobacco use among this community by better tailoring tobacco cessation and treatment
programs to the AI/AN community, increasing tobacco product prices and increasing funding for
tribal tobacco control programs.23

Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, January 10, 2013 / Lorna Schmidt
Additional Sources of Information
• The National Tribal Tobacco Prevention Network, at the Northwest Portland Area Indian Health
Board, http://www.npaihb.org/programs/national_tribal_tobacco_prevention_network/
• National Indian Health Board, http://www.nihb.org, and its Area Health Boards
• Native CIRCLE, American Indian/Alaska Native Cancer Information Resource Center and Learning
Exchange, at Mayo Clinic, http://cancercenter.mayo.edu/native_circle.cfm
• Indian Health Service, http://www.ihs.gov/epi/index.cfm?module=epi_tobacco_main
• Bureau of Indian Affairs, http://www.bia.gov/
• Association of American Indian Physicians, http://www.aaip.org/
Native Americans & Tobacco Use / 3
1 Smoking and Health: Report of the Advisory Committee to the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service, PHS publication 1103, 1964,
http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/sgr/sgr_1964/sgr64.htm. McGinnis, JM, et al., “Actual causes of death in the United States,” Journal of the
American Medical Association (JAMA) 270:2207-2212, 1993.
2 U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), “Annual Smoking-Attributable Mortality, Years of Potential Life Lost, and Productivity
Losses—United States, 2000-2004,” Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) 57(45), November 14, 2008,
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/PDF/wk/mm5745.pdf. McGinnis, JM, et al., “Actual causes of death in the United States,” JAMA 270:2207-2212, 1993.
3 CDC, “Current Cigarette Smoking Among Adults—United States, 2011,” MMWR 61(44):889–894, November 9, 2012,
4 Henderson, et al., “Correlates of Cigarette Smoking Among Selected Southwest and Northern Plains Tribal Groups: The Al-SUPERPFP
Study,” American Journal of Public Health (AJPH) 95:867-872, 2005.
5 CDC, “Current Cigarette Smoking Among Adults—United States, 2011,” MMWR 61(44):889–894, November 9, 2012,
6 CDC, “Current Cigarette Smoking Among Adults—United States, 2011,” MMWR 61(44):889–894, November 9, 2012,
7 CDC, National Center for Health Statistics, “Births: Final Data for 2005,” National Vital Statistics Reports, 56(6), December 5, 2007,
8 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Tobacco Use Among U.S. Racial and Ethnic Minority Groups, Report of the Surgeon
General, 1998, http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/sgr/sgr_1998/index.htm.
9 CDC, “Tobacco, Alcohol, and Other Drug Use Among High School Students in Bureau of Indian Affairs-Funded Schools—United States,
2001,” MMWR 52(44):1070-1072, November 7, 2003, http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/PDF/wk/mm5244.pdf. CDC, “Youth Risk Behavior
Surveillance—United States, 2001,” MMWR 51(SS04):1-64, June 28, 2002, http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ss5104a1.htm.
10 CDC, “Tobacco, Alcohol, and Other Drug Use Among High School Students in Bureau of Indian Affairs-Funded Schools—United States,
2001,” MMWR 52(44):1070-1072, November 7, 2003, http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/PDF/wk/mm5244.pdf.
11 CDC, “Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance—United States, 2001,” MMWR 51(SS-4), June 28, 2002,
12 CDC, “Tobacco, Alcohol, and Other Drug Use Among High School Students in Bureau of Indian Affairs-Funded Schools – United States,
2001,” MMWR 52(44):1070-1072, November 7, 2003, http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/PDF/wk/mm5244.pdf.
13 CDC, “Use of Smokeless Tobacco Among Adults—United States, 1991,” MMWR 42(14):263-266,
14 HHS, Tobacco Use Among U.S. Racial and Ethnic Minority Groups, Report of the Surgeon General, 1998,
15 Schinke, et al., 1989, Surgeon General’s Report, 1994, and Schinke, 1987, according to the Learning Center’s Tobacco and Native
Americans page.
16 CDC, “Tobacco, Alcohol, and Other Drug Use Among High School Students in Bureau of Indian Affairs-Funded Schools—United States,
2001,” MMWR 52(44):1070-1072, November 7, 2003, http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/PDF/wk/mm5244.pdf.
17 CDC, “Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance—United States, 2001,” MMWR 51(SS-4), June 28, 2002,
18 HHS, Tobacco Use Among U.S. Racial and Ethnic Minority Groups, Report of the Surgeon General, 1998,
http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/sgr/sgr_1998/index.htm. National Center for Health Statistics, “Health, United States, 2011: With
Special Features on Socioeconomic Status and Health,” http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/hus/hus11.pdf.
19 HHS, Tobacco Use Among U.S. Racial and Ethnic Minority Groups, Report of the Surgeon General, 1998,
http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/sgr/sgr_1998/index.htm. See also, National Center for Health Statistics, “Health, United States,
2011: With Special Features on Socioeconomic Status and Health,” http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/hus/hus11.pdf. CDC, “Cancer Mortality
Among American Indians and Alaska Natives—United States, 1994–1998,” 52(30):704–707, August 1, 2003,
20 HHS, Tobacco Use Among U.S. Racial and Ethnic Minority Groups, Report of the Surgeon General, 1998,
http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/sgr/sgr_1998/index.htm. Espey, D, et al. “Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer,
1975–2004, Featuring Cancer in American Indians and Alaska Natives,” Cancer, 110(10):2119-52, November 2007. Henderson, et al.,
“Patterns of Cigarette Smoking Initiation in Two Culturally Distinct American Indian Tribes,” JAMA 99:2020-2025, 2009. Casper, M., et al. “Atlas
of Heart Disease and Stroke Among American Indians and Alaska Natives,” 2005, http://www.cdc.gov/dhdsp/atlas/aian_atlas/. CDC, “Cancer
Mortality Among American Indians and Alaska Natives—United States, 1994–1998,” 52(30):704–707, August 1, 2003,
21 CDC, “Cancer Mortality Among American Indians and Alaska Natives—United States, 1994–1998,” 52(30):704–707, August 1, 2003,
22 Espey, D, et al. “Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer, 1975–2004, Featuring Cancer in American Indians and Alaska
Natives,” Cancer, 110(10):2119-52, November 2007.
23 See, e.g., Espey, DK, et al., “Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer, 1975-2004, Featuring Cancer in American Indians and
Alaska Natives,” Cancer (DOI: 10.1002/cncr. 23044) Published online, October 15, 2007; Print issue date, November 15, 2007,

First Nations See Violence (idle no more)

REXTON, N.B. -- The RCMP say they arrested at least 40 people Thursday in eastern New Brunswick as a protest over shale gas development turned violent when officers began enforcing an injunction to end the demonstration.

At least five RCMP vehicles have been destroyed after they were set on fire, Molotov cocktails were thrown at officers, and at least one shot was fired by someone who isn't a police officer, Const. Jullie Rogers-Marsh said in a statement.

"The RCMP has worked diligently with all parties involved in hopes for a peaceful resolution. Those efforts have not been successful," Rogers-Marsh said.

"Tensions were rising, and serious criminal acts are being committed."

The Mounties say the arrests were made for firearms offences, threats, intimidation, mischief and violating the court-ordered injunction to end the protest near Rexton.


The RCMP began enforcing the injunction at around 7:30 a.m. to end a the blockade of a compound where energy company SWN Resources stores exploration equipment. Route 134 at Rexton and Route 11 between Richibucto and Sainte-Anne-de-Kent were closed to traffic and schools in the area were closed early for the day.

The RCMP blocked Route 134 on Sept. 29 after a protest began spilling onto the road. Protesters subsequently cut down trees that were placed across another part of the road, blocking the entrance to the compound.

The protesters, who include members of the Elsipogtog (ell-see-book-took) First Nation, want SWN Resources to stop seismic testing and leave the province.

Robert Levi, a councillor with the Elsipogtog First Nation, said he went to the protest site in Rexton early Thursday after hearing the RCMP had moved in to begin enforcing the injunction against the protesters.

Levi said police pepper-sprayed dozens of people after 9:30 a.m. when he arrived with the chief and council.

"They sprayed the crowd that was there," he said in an interview. "The chief was manhandled a little bit and all hell broke loose."

Premier David Alward did not return messages seeking comment, but last week he and Chief Arren Sock agreed to set up a working group to find a resolution. Meetings were held in Fredericton and Moncton.

At the time, Alward said: "I can say that we have a consensus that we're working towards finding a peaceful resolution and we will continue that work." He said the working group, which would include members from his government, Elsipogtog and the energy industry, would begin its work immediately.

But Sock said there were still many details to be worked out.

Alward has said he doesn't have control over decisions of the RCMP and SWN Resources.

Assistant commissioner Roger Brown, the commanding officer for the RCMP in New Brunswick, said last week he was disappointed that discussions between the provincial government and the First Nation had failed to resolve the issue. He said the Mounties would take a measured approach to resolving the situation.

Opponents of the shale gas sector say the process used to extract the resource -- hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking -- could pollute drinking water. But proponents of the industry say such concerns are overblown and don't take into account the possibility of replacing coal and oil with cleaner burning natural gas.

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2013/10/17/elsipogtog-photos-rcmp-protest-violence_n_4114506.html