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Maine State Library Maine State Documents Center for Disease Control Documents Health & Human Services 1-15-2000 Health Status and Needs Assessment of Native Americans in Maine: Final Report Maine Department of Human Services Maine Bureau of Health Paul Kuehnert Maine Department of Human Services, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at:http://statedocs.maine.gov/mecdc_docs Recommended Citation Maine Department of Human Services; Maine Bureau of Health; and Kuehnert, Paul, "Health Status and Needs Assessment of Native Americans in Maine: Final Report" (2000).Center for Disease Control Documents.Paper 91. http://statedocs.maine.gov/mecdc_docs/91 This Document is brought to you for free and open access by the Health & Human Services at Maine State Documents. It has been accepted for inclusion in Center for Disease Control Documents by an authorized administrator of Maine State Documents. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Health Status and Needs Assessment of Native Americans in Maine: Final Report Paul Kuehnert, M.S., R.N. Director, Division of Disease Control Maine Bureau of Health January 15, 2000 Maine Department of Human Services Bureau of Health 11 State House Station Augusta, Maine 04333-0011 Angus S. King, Jr. Governor Kevin Concannon, Commissioner Dora Anne Mills, MD, MPH Bureau Director In accordance with Federal laws, the Maine Department of Human Services does not discriminate on the basis of sex, age, color, or national origin or disability in admission or access to, or treatment or employment in its programs and activities. The Department Affirmative Action Coordinator has been designated to coordinate our efforts to comply with and implement these federal laws and can be contacted for further information at 221 State Street, Augusta, Maine 04333 (207)287-3488 (voice), or 207-287-4479 (TTY). Acknowledgements This report would not have been possible without the cooperation, information, and insights provided by the directors and staffs of the Native American health centers in Maine. The health directors are: • Brian Altvater, Passamaquoddy tribe—Pleasant Point, Maine • George Bear, Penobscot Nation – Indian Island, Maine • Elizabeth Martin, Passamaquoddy tribe – Indian Township, Maine • John Oulette, Aroostook band of Micmac Indians --- Presque Isle, Maine • Michelle Tarr, Houlton band of Maliseet Indians, Houlton, Maine Additionally, a number of staff from the Maine Department of Human Services’ Bureau of Health and Bureau of Medical Service made key contributions to this report. They include: Cathy St. Pierre and Brenda Corkum of the Office of Data, Research and Vital Statistics; Michael Day of the Bureau of Medical Services; Nancy Sonnenfeld, Patricia Jones, Barbara Leonard, Fredricka Wolman and Judith Graber of the Division of Family and Community Health; Dorean Maines, Office of Health Data and Program Management; Mark Griswold, Michelle Mosher, Linda Huff, Sally Lou Patterson, Robert Burman, and Marlene Crosby of the Division of Disease Control; Andrew Smith, State Toxicologist; and Dora Anne Mills, Director of the Bureau of Health. 2 Background In the late summer of 1999, Mr. Irvin Rich of the U.S. Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) requested that Maine Bureau of Health (BOH) participate in a conference that was being planned for October. The conference, jointly sponsored by HCFA and the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) and the Indian Health Services (IHS), was being organized to address the feasibility of developing collaborative efforts to address health disparities experienced by Native Americans in New England. The conference was to be attended by representatives of New England states’ health and Medicaid programs, private and public universities and colleges, and health and political leaders from the region’s Native American tribes. The Maine BOH was asked to prepare an assessment of the health needs of its Native American residents for presentation to the conference. A preliminary, verbal presentation of the assessment findings was made to the conference participants meeting in Boston, Massachusetts on October 5, 1999. This final, written report is based upon that presentation. 3 Goals and Methods The goals of this health needs assessment and analysis of the Native American population of Maine were: • To provide an overview of the population’s health status; • To identify priority health needs; • To identify health resources and assets; • To identify health service/resource gaps, and • To identify possible areas for action to improve the health of Native American residents of Maine that could be taken by the Maine Bureau of Health. The assessment and analysis were guided by the epidemiological approach to community needs assessment (Finnegan and Ervin, 1989). Specific methods included: • Review of population data on socio-economic status, natality, morbidity and mortality data. All data were compared to the rest of the Maine population for reference purposes. (Natality and mortality data were gathered for the twenty year period 1978-1997 and grouped in five year increments (see discussion in Limitations below.)) • Review of a recent report on a behavioral risk factors survey of one specific Maine Native American sub-population. • Interviews with key informants. Limitations A number of important potential limitations related to the interpretation of the findings of this assessment and analysis must be noted at the outset. First and foremost, the Native American population in Maine is relatively small (approximately 6,500 individuals per the 1990 census). As a result, the number of health-related events (births, illnesses, deaths) are relatively few each year and are unstable from a statistical standpoint. In order to address this problem, natality and mortality data were grouped into five year time periods to enhance their stability and improve the ability to interpret trends. Even so, the reader should note that all underlying numbers are small and must be interpreted with caution. A further complication related to the already-small numbers of health related events amongst the Native American population in Maine is the strong possibility that some data elements from the vital records may not be reliable due to reporting error. A number of studies (Hahn and Eberhardt, 1995) have documented that in a significant number of death certificates in the U.S., race/ethnicity is improperly recorded. Two separate studies ( Hahn and Eberhardt, 1995 and Sorlie et al, 1992), found a misclassification ratio of roughly 0.82 of race on the death certificates of Native Americans. When using mortality data as one measure of health problems in a 4 population, this error has the effect of underestimating the impact of a disease or health problem on the population in which the deaths are misclassified. The implications for this needs assessment are discussed in the Recommendations section of this report. Two additional potential limitations regarding this needs assessment are: 1) the limited time and resources available for the assessment, and 2) the historical role of the Bureau of Health in relation to Native American health in Maine. As to the first issue, while every effort was made to be thorough and comprehensive, the lack of resources did have the effect of limiting the type and extent of data gathering and analysis activities. For example, key informant interviews were limited to tribal health leaders and their key staff. Additional time and resources would have allowed us to interview and/or survey additional community leaders and members. Regarding the second issue, the Maine Bureau of Health has played a relatively minor role in addressing the health of Native Americans in Maine. This has been due to primarily two reasons: 1) the central role of direct federal involvement with Maine’s tribes historically through the Indian Health Service (IHS) and 2) the evolution of tribal autonomy and self-governance in relation to social and health services over the past twenty-five to thirty years. Thus, the Bureau of Health does not have well-established, longstanding relationships with Maine’s tribal health leaders. This, as a result, may have inadvertently limited the information shared in key informant interviews, as well as limiting the depth of the analysis of the information that was shared. Overview of Native Americans in Maine Maine, the largest state in New England, has approximately 1.2 million residents. Taken as a whole, Maine’s residents are relatively poor, as compared to national and regional averages, and live primarily in rural settings. The vast majority (98.5%) of Mainers are white, with the largest racial minority groups in the population being Asian- Pacific Islanders (0.7%) and Hispanics (0.7%), followed by Native Americans (0.5%) and African-Americans (0.5%) (percentages add to greater than 100% due to individuals with multi-racial heritage.) While Maine’s Native Americans live in every county in Maine and each of its cities, the vast majority resides in or near the five small, rural communities of Indian Island (Penobscott Nation), Pleasant Point (Pasamaquoddy tribe), Indian Township (Pasamaquoddy tribe), Houlton (Houlton Band of Maliseet) and Presque Isle (Aroostook Band of Micmac) illustrated in Figure 1. With the exception of Presque Isle, each of these communities includes a reservation where many tribal members live. The Micmacs have only been federally recognized relatively recently and do not have a reservation. Micmacs live throughout Aroostook County and have tribal government offices, a community center, health center and some housing developments in Presque Isle. 5 Figure 1 (cid:1) Presque Isle (cid:1) Houlton Indian Township (cid:1) Pleasant Point (cid:1) (cid:1) Indian Island (cid:1)= Health Center Tribal governments in Maine, as in other parts of the U.S., have unique, direct and fairly complex relationships with the federal government as well as with the State. For the purposes of this assessment, it is important to note that tribal members have all the rights and responsibilities of other Maine citizens, including access to health and social services. Most often, these services – e.g., social services for children or elders -- are delivered under contract with the tribal government as opposed to being delivered by townships or state employees. This is also true for housing and environmental protection programs as well. Each of Maine’s tribes receives funding directly from the IHS. The level of funding is set according to an IHS allocation formula based on the number of tribal members. These funds allow each tribe to operate its own community health center and community health programs. These range from the comprehensive primary care health centers that have been operated by the Penobscott and Pasamaquoddy tribes for nearly thirty years, to the recently established centers of the Maliseet and the Micmac bands which provide limited direct services while purchasing a more extensive set of services from other community providers. However, IHS funds derived from this same allocation formula must also be used to purchase diagnostic, treatment and rehabilitation services for un- or under-insured tribal members. This, in turn, makes funding for preventive and primary care services for each tribe vulnerable to unanticipated, often catastrophic events 6 (e.g., car wrecks with serious injuries) befalling individual members. (These issues are more fully discussed in the Health Resources and Conclusions sections of this report). Population Comparisons The Native American population in Maine is younger than the general population. The population distributions are displayed in Figure 2. The population distribution of Maine Native Americans is similar to distributions of developing nations. Figure 2 Population Distribution -- 1989 Maine -- Total Maine Native American 85+ 85+ 80 - 84 80 - 84 75 - 79 75 - 79 70 - 74 70 - 74 65 - 69 65 - 69 60 - 64 60 - 64 55 - 59 55 - 59 50 - 54 50 - 54 45 - 49 45 - 49 40 -44 40 -44 35 - 39 35 - 39 As detailed in Table 1, Maine Native Americans have lower per capita and 30 - 34 30 - 34 ho25u - 29sehold incomes than those of Mainers as a whole ($7,840 and $21,519 versus 25 - 29 $120 2 - 24,957 and $27,854 respectively), higher rates of unemployment (14.4% versus 6.6%), 20 - 24 an15d - 1 9lower rates of attaining a high school edu1c5 -a 19tion or higher (69% versus 78.8%). 10 - 14 10 - 14 5 - 9 5 - 9 Under 5 Under 5 0 10000 20000 30000 40000 50000 60000 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 Male Female 7 Table I POPULATION COMPARISONS1 MAINE MAINE NATIVE AMERICANS POPULATION 1,227,928 6,392 EDUCATION High School or higher 78.8% 69.0% BA or higher 18.8% 7.7% INCOME Per capita $12,957 $7,840 Median Household $27,854 $21,519 Median Family $32,422 $23,493 EMPLOYMENT In labor force 65.6% 64.5% Unemployed 6.6% 14.4% Natality Comparisons As detailed in Table II, the birth rate of Maine Native Americans has been higher than that of the entire population of Maine during the 1978-1997 period. This is consistent with the population distribution noted above (Figure 2). The percentage of births that are low birth weight (<2500 grams) among Maine Native Americans has averaged 5.3% with little variation during the past twenty years and is the same as the average of the Maine population as a whole (Table II). Table II NATALITY COMPARISONS2 MAINE MAINE NATIVE AMERICANS LIVE BIRTHS PER 1,000 POPULATION: 1978-1982 14.5 21.0 1983-1987 14.2 16.2 1988-1992 13.8 15.1 1993-1997 11.4 16.4 BIRTHS < 2500 grams % OF ALL BIRTHS 1978-1982 5.2% 5.6% 1983-1987 5.3% 5.8% 1988-1992 5.1% 4.5% 1993-1997 5.8% 5.3% 1 Source: US Bureau of the Census, 1990 2 Source: Maine Bureau of Health, Office of Data, Research and Vital Statistics 8 Births to Maine Native American teenagers have been consistently higher --- ranging one and one-half to two times higher --- than births to all Maine teenagers (Table III.) The Maine Native American Teen birth rate apparently declined dramatically between the first and second five year period (from 94.7 to 63.6 births per thousand teen women), but then has remained apparently stable. The average and median ages of Maine Native American teen mothers (17.6 and 18 years respectively) has remained virtually unchanged during the twenty year period and is about the same as that of all Maine teen mothers (17.9 and 18 years respectively). Table III3 Teen Birth Comparison ALL MAINE TEENS NATIVE AMERICAN TEENS Birth rate/1000 Females 15 – 19 years old: 1978-1982 45.6 94.7 1983-1987 40.4 63.6 1988-1992 41.3 68.7 1993-1997 34.1 67.1 As illustrated in Table IV, infant deaths amongst both Maine Native Americans and Mainers as a whole reached record low rates of 6.4 and 5.7 deaths per 1000 live births respectively during the last five year period. Maine as a whole has shown a slow and steady decline in infant deaths over the twenty year period. Maine Native Americans began and ended the period with rates comparable to that of the general population, but there were wide, upward fluctuations in the middle ten years, especially in the 1988-92 period. These fluctuations must be viewed with considerable caution, however, since the underlying numbers are extremely small. Table IV4 Infant Mortality Comparison ALL MAINE MAINE NATIVE AMERICANS Infant deaths/1000 live births: 1978-1982 9.7 9.4 1983-1987 8.5 10.1 1988-1992 6.6 20.3 1993-1997 5.7 6.4 3 Ibid. 4 Ibid 9

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