Tag Archive for: NCUIH

Former BoD President, Moke Eaglefeathers, passed away on 05/31/16

On May 31, 2016  Former NCUIH President, Melbert ‘Moke’ Eaglefeathers, passed away.  Born on May 11, 1953. An enrolled member of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe. Resident of Butte, Montana.

A highly compassionate, spiritual and politically savvy urban Native American leader with an incessant passion to improve in a holistic manner the marginal stage of his communities, Mr. Eaglefeathers, “Moke”, worked in a steady and clear manner to lay solid ground for authentic and permanent changes to happen.

Moke was a widely acknowledged leader in the urban Native community whose achievements were recognized by the Governor of Montana and Senator Tester (MT). For over a decade, he served as the Executive Director of the North American Indian Alliance (NAIA) in Butte, Montana (Big Sky Country). As NAIA’s ED, Moke served multiple times as President and President Elect of the National Council of Urban Indian Health, NCUIH (over 7 years combined between 2006 and 2014).

Moke’s’ extraordinary ability to envision and conceptualize political strategies was critical and instrumental in the accomplishment of one of the primary goals in Indian country and mandates from NCUIH’s Board of Directors. His role as the tribal liaison of the Council made it possible for the urban Indian community to create solid alliances yielding policy gains in the reauthorization of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act (IHCIA). With patience, wisdom and a calculated strategy, Moke embarked on a journey to visit, educate tribal leaders across Indian country on the importance of having health programs for all Native Americans in the cities. As NCUIH’s emissary, he built consensus and managed to engage leaders to stay on a single supporting front to pass the Reauthorization of the IHCIA as a component of the Health Care Reform. His quiet but steady leadership was backed up by Senators Tester and Dorgan during these critical years. Moke was that low key but firm and critical voice on the hill that helped achieve the cornerstone legal authority for the provision of health care to all American Indians and Alaska Natives in a time where many loud attempts were frequently frustrated by a lack of political will on the part of Congress and the Administration. IHCIA was reauthorized in March 2010–a major breakthrough as it permanently secures health care for the American Indian and Alaska Native population and provides not only a road map for the U.S. government to fulfill its trust responsibility to Indian people, but also the right and ability for Urban Indian leaders to confer with the US Government.

Moke, as Board President, also lead the effort to repel the elimination of the funding for the Urban Indian Health Programs that served more than 100,000 American Indians and Alaska Natives with contracts and grants from the Indian Health Service ( 2006-2008- Proposed by the Bush Administration). His leadership and strategy helped NCUIH achieve yearly bi-partisan letters of support from the House and the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs supporting the appropriation of funds for the Urban Indian Health Program. Under his leadership, the Urban Indian Programs were able to not only overcome the proposed elimination of the budget but also accomplished the incredible task of increasing funding significantly to the programs by almost nine (9) million dollars representing an almost 30% increase in funding for all of the urban Indian Health Programs across the U.S..

In 2007, Moke supported NCUIH’s national efforts for the US to endorse the United Nations’ Declaration on Indigenous Peoples Rights. Along with NCUIH Staff, Moke worked hard to educate and build consensus among Native American leaders on how important it was for the United States to join the rest of the world on recognizing and acknowledging that its Indigenous populations have and are fully entitled to preserve a different cosmology of their own. Moke supported for NCUIH to contact the US Department of State’s Ambassador Rice in 2007 and Secretary Clinton in 2009 recommending both to designate a permanent representative to the Forum and the endorsing of the UN Declaration of Indigenous Rights. Stemming from the latter, NCUIH was also granted observer status in the UN Permanent Forum for Indigenous Issues and managed to educate other countries about the US Urban Indians via an intervention in the general assembly by the representative from North America. Obama’s Administration endorsed the Declaration for the first time in 2010.

During his last tenure as NCUIH President, Moke urged members of Congress from both parties to exempt urban American Indians and Alaska Natives from the impact harmful sequester cuts as well as for the US Government agencies to appropriately implement policies stemming from the Affordable Care Act to benefit Native Americans seeking health Services in Urban Indian Health Programs.

NCUIH BoD passes a resolution supporting greater access to Dental Care for Urban Indians

On May 11/2016 The NCUIH BoD resolved that the National Council of Urban Indian Health supports the use of dental therapists to expand the available dental services in Urban Indian clinics and to provide essential oral health services to Urban Indians.

 

It was further resolved that the National Council of Urban Indian Health encourages the Indian Health Service to support the expansion of dental therapy beyond Alaska and into health facilities throughout the United States.   To view the complete document please click here.

Press Release: NCUIH 2016 Recognition Dinner Honors Native Health Leaders

Contact:Maurice “Mo” Smith,
Executive Director
MSmith@ncuih.org,
(202) 544-0344
To see this release in html version click here

San Manuel Band of Mission Indians’ support helps recognize practitioners using culturally grounded approaches in collaboration with modern health practices

ALPINE, CA—The San Manuel Band of Mission Indians has awarded the National Council of Urban Indian Health (NCUIH) a grant to support the 2016 Pendleton Blanket Recognition Dinner, to be held on May 12, at the 18th Annual NCUIH Leadership Conference, Viejas Casino & Resort in Alpine, California. This generous contribution from the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians enhances NCUIH’s ability to address key health issues facing American Indian and Alaska Native people living in urban areas, and helps NCUIH recognize Native health leaders.

The NCUIH will recognize American Indian and Alaska Native health leaders and medical practitioners who exemplify effective use of culturally grounded, strengths-based approaches and interventions, in collaboration with modern practices of health, education, and medicine, to improve the health and well-being of urban Indians. This year’s honorees are Donald Warne, M.D., director of the Master of Public Health Program at North Dakota State University, and Joe Bulfer, CEO of the San Diego American Indian Health Center.   By recognizing Native health leaders and their contributions to the well-being of urban Indians, the award acknowledges the importance of integrating traditional and culturally competent practices with overall health strategies to treat the whole person. These holistic approaches to addressing mental, emotional, physical, and spiritual health and well-being are proven to have the best outcomes for American Indian and Alaska Native patients, but are not fully embraced by modern health care systems.

“One of the most important aspects of Urban Indian Health Programs is our cultural strength,” says NCUIH Board President Donna LC Keeler. “At a recent meeting and workshop the discussion of ‘what is culture’ became very dynamic and powerful. It is very hard to actually pinpoint a definition of culture – it is more powerful to view the concept of ‘how’ you provide culturally sensitive care, rather than ‘what’ you provide. To me culture competency is like the wind—you can’t see it, but you feel it; you know when it is there and when it is not. It is hard to describe but you know it is real.”

Increasing awareness and educating health care providers and funders about the benefits of traditional, knowledge-based approaches are crucial to promoting their increased use and encouraging greater federal funding to incorporate them into health delivery systems

The Honorees
Donald Warne, M.D., M.P.H., the national honoree, is the director of the Master of Public Health Program at North Dakota State University and senior policy advisor to the Great Plains Tribal Chairmen’s Health Board. Dr. Warne is a member of the Oglala Lakota Nation from Pine Ridge, S.D., and comes from a long line of traditional healers and medicine men. He has a proven commitment to advancing American Indian and Alaska Native wellness through his advocacy for using science and ethics to improve Native public health; incorporating traditional holistic practices that treat the physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual condition; and focusing more investment on preventive care to keep people healthy rather than waiting to treat them when they are sick.

Joe Bulfer, the local honoree, is CEO of the San Diego American Indian Health Center and has 30 years of experience promoting quality American Indian and urban Indian health care. Under his leadership, San Diego’s urban program has nearly doubled the number of clinical visits provided each year and increased the number of patients served by 60 percent, while consistently serving a majority of Native patients. Mr. Bulfer has been a NCUIH board member for the past three years, and has been a strong advocate for Native health during federal budget appropriation committee hearings on tribal sovereignty, self-determination, and Indian Health Care Improvement Act amendments.

About NCUIH
The National Council of Urban Indian Health (NCUIH) is a national 501(c)(3) organization devoted to the support and development of quality, accessible, and culturally competent health services for American Indians and Alaska Natives living in urban settings. Members include urban Indian Health organizations and providers across the country.One member organization, Native American Lifelines in Baltimore, was recently featured in two news pieces that recognize the unique experiences urban American Indians face in today’s society.

An article in the Native Health News Alliance, highlights Lifeline’s youth programming as a way for youth to heal from the toxic stressors they face in urban communities. Lifelines was also featured in PBS’s Frontline’s story, “Chasing Heroin: How the Heroin Epidemic Differs in Communities of Color.”Lifelines provides positive cultural experiences, including indigenous gardening and adult mentoring, to combat cultural loss and renew self-identity, delivering trauma-informed care specific to and informed by the unique experiences of urban American Indians

National Council of Urban Indian Health Attended the National Minority Health Mons 2016 HHS Health Equality Forum

National Council of Urban Indian Health attended the National Minority Health Month 2016 Health Equity Forum on April 7th, 2016. The theme for the event was “Accelerating Health Equity for the Nation”. This event also celebrated the 30th Anniversary of the creation of the HHS Office of Minority Health (OMH), to ensure everyone has the ability to achieve health equity.

A timeline video highlighted all the successes of OMH since 1986, including the creation of the American Indian and Alaska Native Health Research Advisory Council (HRAC)
in 2006. Technical Assistance and Research Director, Kimberly Fowler was in attendance at the forum, which included keynote remarks by Dr. Karen DeSalvo, MD, MPH, MSc, HHS Acting Assistant Secretary for Health. The forum led by the Director of the Office of Minority Health, Dr. J. Nadine Gracia, MD, MSCE, featured as a presenter President Obama’s newly confirmed Secretary of the Department of Education, John B. King, Jr. MA, JD, EdD.