As Sask. faces growing COVID-19 cases, Indigenous communities have charted a different path - Action News
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SaskatchewanAnalysis

As Sask. faces growing COVID-19 cases, Indigenous communities have charted a different path

The push to lower COVID-19 cases in Saskatchewan's Indigenous communities has been successful. Opposition critics say it's because they did it on their own.

Starting at the end of January cases in Indigenous communities dropped even as the virus began gathering steam

Betty Nippi-Albright, NDP MLA for Saskatoon Centre, says Mary Simon's appointment to governor general will be an inspiration to Indigenous women and girls. (Kirk Fraser/CBC)

As cases of COVID-19 have climbed in Saskatchewan in 2021, the case counts among the province's Indigenous communities have dramatically decreased.

Data obtained from the federal and provincial governments shows that throughout last yearthe general population of the province and the province's Indigenouscommunities were in lockstep with each other and developing cases at roughly the same time.

But atthe end of January, the two populations began todiverge.

New cases in the province have continued to climb,but inIndigenous communities they'venearly flattened out.

It's a trend that Chief Cadmus Delorme of the Cowessess First Nation is familiar with.

The First Nation, located about140kilometres east of Regina, has an on-reserve population of more than 900 people.

Itwas able to avoid recording a single case of the virus until January 2021.

"On January the 8th, we spiked from zero to 32active cases on Cowessess in atotal of 15 homes and it took us a month and a week to get back down to zero," he told CBC News on Friday."Since then we've had the odd one, but right away the individual or the home will remain at home, safe at home, and we'll provide them all the resources."

Delorme credits communication and a commitment to working together as a reason for the success.

Chief Cadmus Delorme of the Cowessess First Nation says his community has been relatively successful during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Nicholas Frew/CBC)

The provincial government would not comment on the reason for thesplit between the two populations.

The province has includedIndigenous populations as part of itsPhase 1, or priority, vaccine delivery strategy to provide doses to those over 50 living remote or Northern Saskatchewan. As of April 13, it has expanded that campaign to those 40 and up. Itwould not provide specific data on those efforts.

An Opposition criticsays the recent success in Indigenous communities comesdespite alack of provincial support and becausethey were forced to doit on their own.

"The First Nation leaders have been very cognizant about not relying on outside sources to help them, and they've been very diligent to ensuring that their communities are safe, safe and protected," saidBetty Nippi-Albright, NDP MLA forSaskatoon Centre.

A lack of information

One problem with assessing how Indigenous communities have succeeded in the past few months is that there exists no accurate, publicly available data on the effect of COVID-19 on the Indigenous people living off-reserve and in urban communities.

While the federal government provides a running tally of new cases in Indigenous communities by province on a week-by-week basis, the Saskatchewan government doesn't track any race-based data.

A freedom-of-information request filed by the province's NDP indicates that records do not exist for data on deaths, hospitalizations, ICU admissions and infectionsdue to COVID-19 for the off-reserve population.

That'sdespite the federal government's guidance that adults "in or from" Indigenous communities be a prioritized vaccination group due to the disproportionate consequences infection can have on Indigenous people.The risk of severe COVID-19 appears higher in First Nations living off reserve compared to those living on reserve, the guidance says.

Nippi-Albright, who is the NDP'scritic for First Nations and Mtis Relations,has attempted to push the province to track the effect of the pandemic in the province's Indigenous population.

"For co-ordination purposes, it's really important to track those and really importantespecially when members have died from COVID. It's important for the First Nation to know so that the First Nation is prepared to address that in a way that's safe for everyone involved," she said.

During question period this week, she urgedthe province to change its policy of not recording race-based data.

Health Minister Paul Merrimandidn't make a commitment in his response.

Chief Delorme says that the province has in his opinion done its partand that Cowessess hasmostly dealt with the federal government.

But they've still faced challenges vaccinating their members.

An agreement with Indigenous Services Canada means that on-reserve members of the First Nation will receive vaccinations directly through the band health office. But those who live off-reserve are supposed to receive their doses through the provincial government and the Saskatchewan Health Authority.

He says the gap has resulted in an unequal distribution among members of the Cowessess First Nation, with some off-reserve members asking to be vaccinated in Cowessess.

But due to the arrangement and how vaccinations are being supplied, that's impossible. The First Nation can request doses but aren't able to determine how many they'll receive.

Delorme says he wants everybody to be treated fairly

"Our jurisdiction, our inherent rights, our treaty rights do not have borders," Delorme said.Theylie with the people. Doesn't matter where they live."

On reserve, they've provided hundreds of doses and are vaccinating members as young asin their 20s.

However, the success hasn't come without hardship.

"We don't even host funerals.... When someone passes we don't even have a gathering, and that is not part of our way. And people are sacrificing.And post-pandemic,when we have our first powwow, when you hear that drum and you see those dancers, it is going to be extra emotional," hesaid.

With files from CBC's John Paul Tasker