Thứ Bảy, 27 tháng 10, 2018

News on Youtube Oct 27 2018

Actually, the small earthquakes they

happen every day and sometimes you don't

feel it, you don't know about it,

but they happen every day.

My name is Vladimir Yanusik and I work for the

State of California Department of

Conservation CGS California Geological Survey and I work with the Strong Motion

Instrumentation Program. We install seismic sensors all over the State of

California pretty much. The Strong Motion Instrumentation Program has over 1,200

sites and each site may have multiple recorders, multiple sensors, and those

sensors they called accelerometers and

they pick up the earthquake movements.

The data gets captured and gets used by the

seismic community. It gets used

designing new bridges, designing new buildings,

and assisting with our new

earthquake early warning systems.

I was really interested in electronics. I think

I got that passion from my dad. He was like a radio hobbyist. One day you come back from work

to find his radio disassembled [laughter].

And I'm like, "This is cool!" You know? I reversed engineered it.

It's my drive, my passion to work with electronics where the

electronics gets used in a way to help the people, serve the people in California.

I think that that that sounded real exciting. So, my favorite site that I've

worked on is Salesforce tower. It's a significant building. It is the tallest west

of Mississippi River. Love to work for people of California and I enjoy doing what I do.

Sometimes there's difficult projects, but

when you think of yourself as a public servant and then you

contributing to safety of the bridges, dams, high-rises, fire

stations, and hospitals it definitely motivates me and it's a great feeling.

For more infomation >> We Serve CA | Vladimir Yanusik, Department of Conservation - Duration: 2:24.

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#Hot video# Jacqueline Fernandez In #Public #hot enjoyment - Duration: 1:23.

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For more infomation >> #Hot video# Jacqueline Fernandez In #Public #hot enjoyment - Duration: 1:23.

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|MMDxfriendsu| When You See Your Friends In Public - Duration: 0:10.

For more infomation >> |MMDxfriendsu| When You See Your Friends In Public - Duration: 0:10.

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Chef Sam Choy opens his new location to the public at Aloha Tower - Duration: 11:04.

For more infomation >> Chef Sam Choy opens his new location to the public at Aloha Tower - Duration: 11:04.

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KPOP IN PUBLIC CHALLENGE PRODUCE 48 RUMOR DANCE IN PUBLIC - Duration: 4:01.

KPOP in Public Challenge Produce 48 Rumor

For more infomation >> KPOP IN PUBLIC CHALLENGE PRODUCE 48 RUMOR DANCE IN PUBLIC - Duration: 4:01.

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Helena Public Works planning changes to snow plowing policies this winter - Duration: 1:07.

For more infomation >> Helena Public Works planning changes to snow plowing policies this winter - Duration: 1:07.

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Native American Culture and Public Health - Duration: 1:04:46.

Hello and welcome to the master of public health online programs faculty spotlight

webinar with Dr. Claradina Soto presented by the Keck School of Medicine

at the University of Southern California my name is Kijuana Carter and I am the

enrollment advisor here for the Master of Public Health OInline program and I'd

like to thank you for taking time out of your busy schedule to join us before we

begin I like to review what you can expect during the presentation so cut

down on background noise please mute your phone line so as not to disturb the

presenters if you have any questions for our speakers please type them into the

Q&A box in the lower right hand corner of your screen and hit Send feel free to

enter your questions as you think of them and we'll answer as many as time

allows at the end of the presentation a copy of this recording and slide

presentation will be available shortly after here's a quick look at what we'll

be covering today first I will share some information about the tech School

of Medicine of USC I'll give you some background information about our program

director dr. Shobha Kumar who will be available during the Q&A session for any

questions then we'll hear from William Jardel who will introduce our speaker

Dr. Claradina Soto lastly we'll end the presentation with a

brief Q&A session now let's begin about the Keck School of Medicine Keck is the

oldest Medical School in Southern California it was established in 1885

today it is a place of dynamic activity in patient care scientific discovery

medical and bioscience education and community service the department of

preventive medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC is known as a leader

in public health in population health sciences it is organized into six

divisions disease prevention and global health bioinformatics biostatistics

Cancer, Epidemiology and genetics I earn mental health and health behavior

research the department of preventive medicine performs pioneering research in

areas such as tobacco control breast cancer pediatric obesity global health

interaction between genes and the environment and others some key research

institutes include the Institute for Global Health and the Institute for

Health Promotion and disease prevention research now dr. Kumar is the program

director for the Master of Public Health online program here at USC she has a

background in social return on investment analysis and has successfully

led the design and oversight of several programs in health care disaster relief

and education dr. Kumar has also launched an international humanitarian

NGO for which she was the chief operating officer her recent projects

include capacity-building of healthcare

NGOs and the development and strengthening of emergency medical

systems and sub-saharan Africa now I want to hand it off to William Jardel

who will introduce our speaker hi everyone my name is William Jarnell and

I am the director online student relations for Massa or the Master of

Public Health Student Association and doing these webinars it gives us a

students a way to learn more about the amazing research our faculty is doing in

ways in which we can learn more and get involved I'm very excited to introduce

to all of you Dr. Soto as our speaker for today Dr. Claradina Soto is a

full-time assistant clinical professor at the University of Southern California

Keck School of Medicine she received her mph and PhD from the USC Keck School of

Medicine and she has over 20 years of experience working with American Indian

and Alaskan native populations in public health to collaborate on several

research projects with various organizations to reduce and prevent

mental health disparities commercial tobacco use and sub substance use

disorders to teaches courses in the master of

public health and health promotion programs at USC and mentors

undergraduate and graduate students dr. Soto is a longtime advocate for American

Indian and Alaska Native communities and other priority populations to advance

health equity and reduce health disparities I urge you to listen closely

to the great information being presented today and to take notes on any questions

you would like to ask at the end of the presentation will you please help me in

welcoming dr. Soto to the presentation

thank you and I know take the lead yes please okay good afternoon everybody

thank you so much for this opportunity to be able to share with you about

Native American culture and health this presentation is really primarily to just

give an awareness and some information about this population because oftentimes

that's not enough information in our courses even starting from elementary to

high school to undergrad unless of course you have selected some of these

historical courses right so it really is a great opportunity to provide even just

some of the additional additional perspective you may not have had on this

population and so I get really excited to be able to share some of this with

you I will share some of the projects at the end of just what's happening in

hopes there might be some opportunity for students to be able to be engaged in

but this presentation is just more about the population about some of the

historical events and giving an example about a public health environmental

justice issue that's happening at hand in the Navajo Nation but I definitely

will look forward to questions at the end of the presentation so with that I

will just say that I am very fortunate to be here at USC and I'm very happy to

be able to work with this population because there's

very much an underserved and under-resourced community we'll see here

in the next slide the number of populations that do exist and so for

myself I am full-blooded Native American I am half Navajo and half pueblos and so

I definitely learned so much and working and partnering and collaborating with a

number of tribal communities with a lot of the projects we have here housed at

USC also with that I'll go to my next slide which is just to really share how

many there are the American Indians and Alaska native populations in the US and

so according to the u.s. census there are about 5.2 million people who are

identify as such there are over five hundred and seventy plus federally

recognized tribes in the United States I do always like to mention that there of

that there were over 200 plus federally recognized tribes in Alaska and I always

call them the Forgotten group because oftentimes people don't realize there

are tribal communities up there and let alone that there are over 200 not just

and needless to say I always mentioned not the only early the forgotten group

but there are hard - some are hard to reach communities because they can be

accessed by playing or only by boat or only by snowmobile of course you can

understand the environment that which some of these folks live in and so it's

just an important to be able to recognize these communities up there and

there's definitely a lot of great work being done as well just a note here that

the Navajo Nation is one of the largest Indian reservations and that of these

groups there are over 200 indigenous languages spoken and so it's important

to know that there's a lot of culture that there are a lot of unique

differences but a lot of similarities but it's great to know that there's a

lot of the cultural preservations that exist in many of these communities and I

wanted to just note as well that you've already probably heard different

terminology I don't have the right answer I often get asked you know what

do what what is the best way to say Native American American Indian it just

it differs them I've have learned in different communities I have gone to to

use certain terms obviously the most appropriate would be to be

calling these communities by their tribe are their tribal names that they prefer

to be called by and so even to say the Navajo Nation you know the folks like to

be called the name which means the people so you have different

terminologies terminologies or different ways that tribal communities like to be

called and so just wanted to make note of that as well much of my work is being

done in California and many often don't know that there are over 100 over 100

federally recognized tribes in the state of California and so there's a lot of

work to be done here especially because you also have the urban Indian

population you may want you may question what is an urban Indian and these are

individuals who are of American Indian ancestry that relocated to an urban area

either by to seek employment to get an education or it could have also been by

forced by forced relocation primarily by the US government

so I myself am a product I always say a vendor being an urban Indian born and

raised in the Bay Area so in Northern California in San Leandro near Oakland

and so I am an urban Indians not of a California tribe as I've mentioned my

tribes are from the southwest but this is really important in terms of when it

comes to conducting research and trying to collaborate and partner with the

urban Indian population so oftentimes that means going to different urban

Indian agencies and organizations that exist throughout different areas in the

Bay Area here in LA downtown LA has the United American Indian involvement which

services the urban Indian population with behavioral health services mental

health services medical they have programs to work with the elders and

with the youth so there's some great comprehensive programs to reach these

populations my next slide here is just to show a map of some of the more common

tribal communities that exist here in the United States and just by location

and I always like to note in the US there's only 35 states that

have tribes and so this kind of can be an indicator in terms of the

administration you know the US government and where folks may say that

they don't need to have to have this community on their radar and trying to

create better services because they don't have tribal communities in their

state but that's not needless to say that there's a lot of great efforts that

still needed for various communities that do exist with the over five hundred

seventy plus federally recognized tribes here in these another question that

always gets asked is no how can one become a register you know a member of a

particular you know community here and so this is always a big this deserves I

think you know a whole session in itself but I'll just take note here that it is

tribes to establish their own criteria for membership as this really provides

the unique character and traditions of each tribes and so each tribe does are

able to establish their own membership criteria and so typically this could be

more of the general piece here where a tribe may say they have to show that

they are a fourth tribal blood a descendant of a tribal member and so

usually if you already have your parents or grandparents as an enrolled member to

a tribe it's pretty you just can indicate that and then the tribe will

see that lineage for you to get your tribal membership it is important to

note though as well that you can only enroll in one tribe and so I myself

being full-blooded I can only enroll in either the Nabal side of the Pueblo side

and so I actually am an enrolled member in the Navajo Nation but actually my

children are enrolled in the pueblos and those are for various reasons but in any

event these just gives you an idea of just kind of that process of what

happens and how this membership is actually also important in terms of

resources being made available to convent American Indian community the

other important that's important to make students aware

of and even just the general population is about tribal sovereignty as the

federal recognition American Indian tribes can self-govern themselves as

sovereign nations and so they're maintaining their own government of

government to government relationship with the United States and so I'd like

to try and see it as how California is its own state what each tribe is kind of

its own state as well because they are able to govern and govern their own

tribal members their own tribal land and provide their own infrastructure for

their own community but we do have to abide by federal laws in many ways just

as other US states have to do that same thing but this part is very important

especially in just the work that I do with some of our research projects

because we want to be able to respect the tribal sovereignty of these

communities and so this comes into this is a very important piece because when

we comes to laws and policies though some of my work is in tobacco control

and California has done an excellent job in trying to reduce tobacco commercial

tobacco use in the general population which has reduced but that has not been

the case for our populations here the Native American population because

there's a lot of work to still be done and so so the communities here the

tribes don't have to abide by state laws meaning that they don't so a lot of the

casinos here in California they allow smoking and they rightfully should have

that right to do so because they have the right and their government and their

laws to be able to do that is so that does take extra effort for us to make

sure that they understand you know the education and the implications on some

of these policies here but we have to respect that that's their their laws

that they governed by but the other piece that is important is that any work

that's being done is you have to have the tribe be a part of that process

because they had to have to be in collaboration and in partnership in any

work trying to especially when it comes to public health and health promotion so

I often times have to start with the tribal leaders and get tribal approval

for any work that's being done and collaboration so that they know that

that partner is happening so this is just a really

important piece to be able to highlight here especially when trying to work with

various tribal communities just throughout the United States so with

that I just like to highlight again when working with tribal communities that you

want to be able to respect the sovereignty develop a relationship that

is so important because you want to be able to nurture that and so oftentimes

when we have these grants and different projects these property grants we need a

long-term grant to mechanism because it takes a while if you don't have an

established relationship it could take three to five years and maybe even more

just to develop a trusting relationship and working with tribal communities and

so for that to happen then you can next be able to work on some of the needs and

what are some of the areas of concern that the community wants to be able to

work with and with your project so including them in the process is

absolutely key to any type of work and so many of you probably have learned

this in your courses already with community-based participatory research

and so that means the tribe the community is being a part of that

process because we just don't want to be able to take we want to be able to have

that mutual relationship with both academic and with the community as well

so with that being that a lot of our work here is in public health and

there's a lot of unfortunate health disparities that exist in this community

I like to just kind of give a brief history of this and really get us in the

mindset of just how to be mindful of some of the traumatic events that have

occurred since the time of the so called you know lumbus had discovered America

but you know the thousands of years preceding European contact

much of our Native communities were organized in societies with their own

forms of government and their own way of life right but once you see this events

of just kind of these historical topics here that have happened from 1492 up

until the present day there's a lot of things that have occurred during that

history time that really has an impact and can show some of those correlations

into some of the unfortunate health disparities that exist in this

community and so with that colonial period you know we had the proliferation

of European colonies really creating a dominant presence you know on the east

coast of North America right so a lot of the Indian lands were forcefully

acquired by the Europeans which led into the removal of a lot of tribes and

forced migrations to these tribes to move west I mean this even came to a

point where at least 90 million acres of land that are the natives we're living

on were taken from tribes and given to settlers as a surplus was often without

compensations to the tribe unfortunately so during this time there was a lot of

removal and a lot of now putting these communities once living in their way of

life onto these reservations now and so not only have you removed them but you

place them on these lands there they now have to be able to adapt in a new

environment new culture way of life new sources of food and other things and

that's and this of course is a very resilient community but you have to

think about some of those things that they now have had to adapt to and

currently still - to this day living with some of those folks being on on the

reservation so you had all of that during that period and the big piece of

this is really this assimilation that happened with the US government trying

to assembly on the Native communities into mainstream society really trying to

not only remove them from their land but remove them from their cultural way of

life and that in itself you know really has an impact and so there's a lot of

things that have happened within that history to be able to do that but

needless to say in the 1930s you know we did have some sort of you know this kind

of Indian Reorganization to be able to give back and where the federal

government began to restore some of this Indian land and creating programs to

rehabilitate and the end of the economic life of this community but needless to

say what happened after that was this unfortunate termination period where the

government the youth the Congress decided to terminate at least 100 tribes

really creating an economic laughter for many tribal communities

again resulting in millions of acres of land being lost and of course the way of

life or for many of these communities but as of now you know so you have to

think of that time that's just not too far go you know from the 50s and 60s

then now we have here the self-determination period which is

absolutely happening you know with our communities being able to have this kind

of resurgence of tribal government involvement with Congress to be able to

that I have any additional terminations but to really provide that state

recognition in federal recognitions to to those tribes and develop more

policies for self-determination and self-governance as well so that's I just

like to kind of point out as it's important to be mindful as this does

have an impact on how this creates some of the public health issues in this

community and so with that I wanted to kind of share a little bit more about

some examples of this assimilation and how this happened and so they had back

in the day Richard general richard pratt which had he's famous for his quote of

building indian and saved the man when you think about this quote this is

trying to take away the language the culture the wave dress but to

Americanize them basically and so you can see this picture here of this navajo

gentleman and his traditional work but three years later he is now transformed

into this kind of militant looking an individual and this really had was based

on folks being part of this boarding school which the government also had

this part of their systematic way of assimilating Native children in the

school system of assimilating them into mainstream society right so just another

systematic way of the government and so this picture here is of the Carlisle

Indian boarding school that happened in the late 1880s to early 1990s and again

these boarding schools were developed to a

American Indians and so this goal is very well known in Pennsylvania which

this became the model for at least another twenty six boarding schools in

15 states and also hundreds of private boarding schools sponsored by various

religious denominations and so actually both my parents are products of boarding

schools my mother being taken away from her family at a very young age I want to

say six seven years of age and living in a boarding school being raised by non

natives and not being needle able to speak her language

her mouth being washed out with soap if she was not if she was to speak her

language when she's trying to speak to a peer of hers which none of them knew

English at the time right but that was something that they were mandated to do

and if they broke any type of rules or laws of that and within this boarding

school they were recommended so there was a lot of physical abuse verbal abuse

and even sexual abuse that happened in these boarding schools and so again this

is just another indication of some of this assimilation practices that

occurred by the government that really as a major impact on this community long

standing for sure again even me having my own parents being part of this system

a product of this system and so you can see that this new terminology that's not

new but more of this is coming into the research of this historical trauma which

really is just showing the experience of the series of traumatic events by the US

government and how this has implications to to our community in many ways because

of this listing that you see here of all these different acts that have happened

so this does now reflect you know in our communities the higher than average

rates of suicide homicide domestic violence child abuse substance abuse and

really because of these attempts to assimilate our communities and our

populations by forcing them into these boarding schools but then also thinking

of these others of putting them into reservations now which

and they have changed their diet their culture etc etc and so with that you see

a lot of these and so within the research there are questions now that we

have to indicate if folks think about these historical traumatic events what

are some of these Disqus symptoms that are now occurring and you really see a

lot of these breakdown in our families because of this forced removal of our

children or because of these other historical events that have happened and

our reasons for high rates of child abuse now you have to think if these

folks that we're taking in to these boarding schools are raised in these

boarding schools you know they their parenting style can definitely be

different and there's a lot of even just a lot of healing that needs to happen

because of the abuse and other traumatic things that have happened while being in

there and so there's a lot of higher rates now of domestic violence and I

think there's just a lot of anger issues that are still happening that need to be

dealt with and a lot of healing is mentioned that needs to happen in this

community then we also have just a lot of psychological issues happening that

are really impacting a person's well-being you know unfortunately higher

alcohol consumption substance abuse fortunately having low self-esteem and

this being because of cultural identity I'm having a lack of positive role miles

role models excuse me but then also these other physiological things that

are happening as we do have higher rates of heart disease injuries with diabetes

and other issues ten which I think are only yeah so in terms of just the health

status as well again being that there's just there's many causes of health

disparities that really span the life spectrum within this community with high

infant mortality rates high prevalence of chronic diseases mental health

disorders and substance abuse but I do give but there is a lot of resilience

that has happened in this community and culture has definitely been one way to

not only heal but also a way to promote the well-being in in the community

so here when we compare the American Indian

Kaneda population comparing them to the overall u.s. they are younger poor and

more likely to be unemployed or lack health insurance again suffer from high

rates of a number of health health related illnesses and then also to have

a lower life expectancy and then the general US population so is that there

are a number of health risk of course based on this you know and there's a lot

of issues that are related and complicate things these are just a

number of public health issues that need to be addressed and so here with some of

my work it's dealing with them trying to reduce mental health reduce substance

use tobacco use and some environmental issues as well this community but this

definitely deserves a lot more attention and oftentimes I do ask if you are

sitting in a table and there always has to have that needs the representation

needs to happen to bring the this community their issues to the table so

even if as you're just learning some of this and you are in a meeting maybe your

job is in a county or you know in some agency and there's things happening for

other communities now I do ask that you you know pose the question of how are

how how is this how are they reaching this community and how are some of the

issues being addressed especially if it may relate to some of these topics here

that you see on the slide so so that's just kind of that little piece of the

health promotion those things to keep in mind when you think about how wire why

why are there a lot of health issues and health disparities in this community and

when there's a lot of things that have happened you know through through

history that absolutely have an impact on this and so this deserves a lot of

additional attention a lot of additional work to be done and a lot of

collaboration and partnership with these communities to be able to address the

various needs within these communities and so

I'll leave it at that because my next slides are to also provide an example of

just kind of this public health issues of high rates of cancer high rates of

other illnesses due to uranium mining so I'll go ahead and go to this next slide

here this is something that I was able to do over 20 years ago and it's that

felt so long ago but this is still an issue currently on the Navajo Navajo

Nation where the community is dealing with a lot of high rates of cancer and

high rates of black lung disease other illnesses due to radiation exposure and

these aren't just folks that worked in the mines but their families and

families that live around abandoned waste sites abandoned

waste that sits on the reservation so it's always great to just increase your

awareness about current issues that are happening just here in our own backyard

in the United States and so this map here just shows where the Navajo Nation

sits in the southwest most of parts of Arizona parts of New Mexico and Utah and

so my family's from Farmington New Mexico right near the four corners and I

had an opportunity to do an internship in my undergrad years so it was a

familiar territory but living there was another interesting aspect in trying to

dis understand this issue at hand because we were trying to increase the

awareness of the community that we needed to get Congress to take action to

not only help those that were sick but to also remove a lot of the waste that

was sitting in the community but this picture here just shows of some

documentaries that have been done about this issue so this is a picture of

Justin Evelyn - to give you an idea of just their work environments because

they many of these miners were working in for $2 a day and not having much

fresh air where those that were working in the mines had no proper ventilation

and so they were being exposed is this radioactive material daily and so but

little did they know what they were being

suppose do they have no idea at that time but the companies did obviously so

this is just showing how uranium is a naturally occurring radioactive element

and so many Navajo men worked in these mines and these Mills

jobs were near their home and was one of the only jobs available at the time and

which was during the 40s and 50s there was many jobs that included different

positions again but no protective equipment was provided and so they

inhaled a lot of the dust and drink contaminated waters near these mines

this picture here also indicates how the environment has been contaminated

because a lot of the excess waste that they didn't need they would just shuffle

it over the cliff sides and so that gets into the farmland that gets into there

to the animals that graze and so sheep is a staple in this community where many

come families when I would go home to visit grandma she would butcher a sheep

and we would have a wonderful family feast but these animals are ingesting

contaminated things within the environment and again and it's getting

into a lot of the farming of the communities that farm as well the

picture on the bottom indicates a lot of the abandoned sites that still sit in

the community EPA has done some work the Environmental Protection Agency where

some places have been considered more hazard than others but there's still a

lot of abandoned sites that have not been touched because they don't quite

meet that criteria that need does it say there's a lot of exposure still

happening in this community especially for those them with this picture here

shows an abandoned mine so you see how fast they open this is and this is from

some of the work that I did over 20 years ago and I was very thankful to

these folks because they told me to stay away if I wanted to have children to

stay away from these abandoned sites because we the question was home how

much exposure do you need is could get you sick and so I definitely kept my

distance but there is a lot of children that we're playing in these

minds not knowing or in tiles of the mill tellings and oftentimes some of the

families are taking these chunks of the or the leftover sites to build their

bread ovens or even have at their own home foundations or build fireplaces I'm

not knowing that they are being exposed to radioactive elements on a daily basis

and so this picture here if you could see kind of that there's a dark mountain

in the back but the lighter one in front of that is the actual meal telling some

waste that sits in the middle of the reservation near to the city and so this

is uncovered with cement but needs us to say once this has been dug up and put

out there's still that exposure can exist so no matter how thick that that

cement is that exposure is still radiating out into the community with

the beta gamma alpha rays I don't know which one of those but you get my point

I'm sorry I'm not the scientist here on this piece but this just kind of gives

you an idea of this how long and how much of this waste is in this community

is still being exposed where they've picked up and collected some of it but

again it still sits in a community exposing a particular community there

and the the part about this is that you know you have over time this seepage

that's this is now getting into the groundwater and so there's a lot of

research actually being done by the University of New Mexico which I'm

really thankful for and they're really identifying a lot of contaminated areas

and sites and really I think this is also helpful

to ensure that future mining is not going to happen because there's still a

lot of high rich deposits of uranium that sits on the Navajo Nation that the

government wants their hands on and we want to make sure that the Navajo Nation

government again who is sovereign entity and they can make that decision to say

yes will allow you but being more informed and knowing how much harm this

has caused this community and the environment that hopefully it will keep

the the additional mining from happening in this community and so again there's

just a lot of diseases now that are happening in this community with higher

rates of lung cancer

all because of these exposure to byproducts you know again in the soil

air and water this is something that has been happening in terms of the knowledge

of knowing that correlation of being exposed to radiation and the outcomes of

cancer and other illnesses that that are because of this exposure and so this

really has really created an unfortunate peace for the community and so real

quickly just what's happening now is that the community has really fought

hard in the past 20 years with some good leadership taking it back to Congress to

at least get compensation so those miners former miners their

family their wives the children are able to apply for compensation of up to one

hundred and fifty thousand dollars which folks say is such an insult because this

barely pays for their medical bills and so it's really a challenge to get that

money because you have to you have to approve show documentation that you

worked with one of these companies or that you were married to a miner to out

to be able to help pay off those medical bills there's just a lot of loops and

barriers to this and it's a very big challenge but there's people that are

helping people get compensated but there's a lot of Appeals that have to

happen because you get rejected the first time and then you have to continue

to reapply but it is reaching some but it has missed a lot because there's been

a lot of losses due to this and a lot of because of the illnesses and deaths

related to the cancer from being exposed to all of these deadly materials and so

that's just something at hand that's happening in this community that again

wanted to raise your awareness about this because many of us have no idea

that this is happening and it's still being fought till to this day and folks

trying to remove this contaminated stuff in their in their community but also

help those that are sick shifting gears a little bit I just like to share this

other story because this is kind of a part of the resilience that still

happens to this day and this is the story of culture it is quick story but

this is the puddle revolt that happened in 1680 and so again this not this is

not included in our history books and it absolutely should because this is where

the Pueblo is a new mexico revolted against the Spaniards who were trying to

acquire them and so this picture here shows the different pueblos in this and

New Mexico and famous is mine which is je em easy right above Zia Pueblo but

all of these puzzles were organized by a leader a Taos Pueblo leader named po'pay

and so he's the one that is well known for organizing a rebellion against the

Ruth the the Spaniards and so you see a picture of Statue here that they have up

in New Mexico and in his hand he has a rope of not so he had every Pablo he

made sure that every public got this rope of not because he had said that

every morning that the Sun comes up to remove a knot and when that when we get

to that last knot then that day is when we're going to revolt against the

Spaniards and so that was a way of them reuniting getting together and

organizing this themselves which they of course had a great victory against the

Spaniards which is great so a victory for the puzzles I should say is why a

story of how they still exist today this next picture is just because I love to

share a little bit about famous Pablo and so that is a picture of myself my

father and my two children I do need to update this because my son al dances as

well so my daughter and I are both dressed in our regalia for our

traditional day it is open to the public it's always on August 2nd and so we

dance and it's a time for our community to come together and for prayer for

growth for well-being and so there's a lot of preparation that happens for this

feast day which one is baking bread because that's our main soul or I guess

our instead of using a fork and spoon you know our bread is used to dip in the

red chili stew and the green chili students so this is our oven here

it's a fire that's made and once that's out we remove all the ashes and put all

the seventy plus loaves of bread in there cover it up and bread is nice and

done in an hour but you see here just my children riding their bikes out in the

dirt areas which is just great for the kids to roam because here living in the

city it's a little bit more difficult and letting them allow to just roam

around free so I love showing this picture and just sharing a little bit

about the Hema sculpture because I often do ask students you know what do you

picture when you're thinking of Native communities and so it's great to just

share even just a regalia of our community here I have a few more minutes

but this here is just a little a slide just showing some of these common values

among native Native communities and it's about sharing generosity you know no

matter how much has happened in this community or in the communities I should

say there's oftentimes just a lot of sharing and generosity and oftentimes

it's great going to different conferences that are needed specific

because there's just a lot of sharing in a lot of generosity and just being

thankful for for the thanksgivin family is very important community and tribes

and I always keep that in mind especially with all the work that we

have done because everything we do and at lease with our projects is for the

community and for these families and and the tribes having respect for elders as

I'm sure this is very much a common value for many folks in different

communities but we often want to make sure that we respect our elders and go

to them for guidance and making sure that we are doing things in the most

respectful way and again orientation to present time you know it's great that us

here in modern day life we're always worried about time and this and that but

it's always orientation to present time is just in the moment and so if I have a

2:00 o'clock appointment but I'm meeting with the community we could be talking

for another two hours and you just got to be in that present moment and at that

present time and be with that for this community the other piece

as interesting as communication and I wish I had more time because I have so

much that I have learned with communication with this community in

terms of trying to introduce myself and getting part being a part of different

projects and collaborating and partnering but it is absolutely

important to have FaceTime to be able to introduce yourself to the community

because a phone call is just not going to work

you definitely want to be able to always these are very general of course I want

to say that you know but speak slowly and pause while telling a story because

I overall with this communication I've learned that not all communities but is

that that direct eye contact is important where they don't necessarily

look sometimes that the context the eye contact is looking somewhere else and

people can think of it as being rude and so when I train others to go and help

out in the community when we're trying to gather information oftentimes we'll

let them know that it's not you know it don't if they're not looking at you

don't take it as being rude that's just how it is that they are the they're

still listening those and still paying attention to things but these are just

some of those things that I like to bring up but it doesn't mean that it's

for everybody but these are things that I have absolutely learned along the way

as well and that of course they don't there's a lot of distrust of outsiders

and so again that's part of building that relationship with these communities

as well the other that I like to provide is just again with your with your work

being in health promotion there's health promotion messages as this is just an

example of how trying to reach a specific community with a specific

message that absolutely resonates for this community and so being in tobacco

control and all of this great anti tobacco messaging that has happened out

for the general population we have to be careful because some of that doesn't

quite resonate with us where you're telling our communities our native

communities that all tobacco is bad well it's not because tobacco is very sacred

to us and it's used in traditional ceremonies

and medicinal ways and so how do we give back to give that message to show that

we must preserve that a great part the sacred tobacco but also knowing that if

using tobacco in an abusive way using recreationally that this can be harmful

to your health and that's not we definitely want to provide that message

as well so back in my work this was made over ten years ago but it's great that

we'll still see this poster in various clinics and other native agencies

throughout California this was put together where we were only allowed to

provide to create one Pete one health promotion message and how difficult was

that knowing that we have a beautifully diverse communities throughout the state

of California so how are we going to try and reach all and so we did it to the

best of our ability which then we had to ensure that we were using peripheral

strategies matching the surface characteristics meaning the community

that you're trying to reach right and absolutely having the number four

constituent involving strategies wherein you're involving the community involving

those that can provide that guidance and so this really had with that guidance

they said let's create let's try and create something with just four

directions in mind the north south east and west and so with that in mind the

woman is reflective of the Northern California tribes Yurok basket is

representative of how Southern California tribes weave their baskets

and for the east and west are the tobacco plants that grow to the east and

to the west side and so then you have the messaging that has to be clear right

I can't quite read it from here but hopefully you guys are able to with that

message that is supposed to resonate with this community where it's saying

you know that the Creator gave us tobacco to bless our families in our

community right but if you smoke commercial tobacco and abuse it

you know that's it's going to create harm so we want to keep tobacco as a

gift and not to be abused and so I just wanted to provide that example of how

use some of those strategies and try to create public health messaging for

for this community so with that that ends some of the stuff that I wanted to

share with you all but I also wanted to share some of the funded grants like we

have in hoping that if you have an interest in working with some of the

projects that I have going on currently we are looking for students to help with

data entry maybe literature reviews and so folks

knowing that many of you are online students and may not necessarily be here

some some maybe it'll come through the office but others might be able to work

remotely we are searching for folks for students for some student help it could

either be volunteer it could also be for credit and I forget what those class

credits are but other folks on the line from the mph program can share with that

but we do have a couple of tobacco related programs for smoking cessation

I'm trying to help Nate obtains quit smoking or quit using many of these

other nicotine products such as e cigarettes and vaping things like that

but then we also have a social media project where we're training Native

youth to develop their own media messages with digital storytelling

Photovoice public service announcements and they are being period peer educators

back to the Native youth but also then to tribal councils to create tobacco

policy changes and then we have another that's looking at community readiness in

tribal communities throughout the state of California where we're trying to

understand if tribes are adopting state policies or state laws so for example

California just passed them a lobbying having to be the age of 21 to purchase

so our tribes also adopting that law if they are we're asking why if they are

not and choose not to we're asking why not just to kind of learn a little bit

more about some of the different policies that are in tribal communities

as it relates to tobacco control and this last one is really addressing the

opioid crisis made of Native Americans have some

highest opioid use but also opioid related deaths and this is a really

serious issue happening at hand and so there's a lot of funding being made

available to some of the tribal communities here and urban Indian

populations in California so us here at USC are tasked with the needs assessment

to learn more how this funding can be helpful to create treatment services

prevention and other services to culturally reach these communities but

also evaluation with a lot of these projects that are being funded and

making sure of showing how this is creating an impact to reduce opioid use

and opioid related to us so with that I want to say thank you and I know I went

a little bit over time but looking forward to some of your questions so

thank you everyone thank you and that's all right you went over a little bit

that was a lot of great information that you shared with us today and we are so

grateful for you being with us on this webinar I'm sure we do have plenty of

questions so we are going to open up the Q&A session I do want to remind students

that our program director dr. Kumar is also on the line available for questions

as well I'd like to go ahead and start off the Q&A session actually looking

back at you know some of the research opportunities that you have available

right now and you were talking about some of the roles that they're trying to

feel what steps do students take to participate in any of your research

opportunities what would they need to do to participate yeah so with my

information up there it would just be great to de send an email and so sending

an email it would be great for this to start in spring just to make it easier

that way so again it could be volunteer or could be for or credit and then we

can just touch base and usually I'll ask for a CD and just a statement of

interest and then we can take it from there to see how we might make this an

opportunity so just emailing me and I'll probably follow up in

november/december and then try and figure figure out how we can best get

the help or a number of these projects okay great thank you so much for sharing

that information our next question is is for you dr. Soto do tribes have their

version of public health department's internally that work with federal and

nonprofit public health workers yes they do

tribes have their own departments and not all but some and so some

infrastructures are stronger than others and so these and actually these are some

of the entities that we have to go through and so like even with our

research projects where we have our own academic IRB ensuring that we are not

putting any human subjects at risk we have to get that certification and

approval well some of the tribes else will have their own departments as such

where we have to go through their protocol and IRB process as well

insuring that we're not putting anybody at risk as well so yes they do and then

some either internally fund themselves or they get the support of government

support or that federal funding support their departments okay thank you

our next question is as a student are there grants of scholarships available

for this very important research yes there is I actually ask you well if is

that if there are opportunities I guess I can share that for the mph to share

with the list with the mph listserv that might be helpful I mean okay so this

could be both ways where students may want to work in this capacity or they

may want to get the funding so this could be either for Native students

themselves wanting that additional research experience or those that are

not native but then just wanting to see what other opportunities are they have

that available but things that I have I can definitely share your way to that

absolutely absolutely thank you so much our next question is for healthcare

workers is it hard or not an option to conduct studies from afar

since in-person interaction seems to be of great importance so meaning for

public health workers working in tribal communities am i understanding that

correctly I am going to assume that that yes we're public for public health

workers yes yeah you did yes it's important absolutely have that

interaction in-person interaction that is absolutely of great importance to

ensure that trust and that mutual respect and that continuance of mutual

relationships and building and ensuring that you're trying to meet the needs of

a community so yes absolutely okay our next question actually is are

there popular blogs that I can follow from either yourself or others

concerning awareness on sexual abuse uranium and other topics that impact

Native American culture there's a number of them out there and I think the one

I'll mention is Indian country so you can actually get a subscription to

Indian country it's very inexpensive and it really provides current event issues

I think it comes out weekly I could be wrong but it comes out often and there's

a lot of different current events that shares information about various

communities throughout the u.s. okay thank you for sharing that information

our next question actually is a three-part question so have you have how

has different eras of government been with working with Native Americans is it

worse now than it has been in the past or was there a time it was best as far

as a relationship with the federal government mmm

great question oh that's a really great question because um yeah oftentimes even

just when you think of presidents and former administration our current

administration I mean that's the part that I'm thinking about right and and

how these government's have been or not working with native Native Americans

this really has changed so I mean I even think of just currently you know with

our former President Obama and really putting a lot of first Pacific are how

am I saying that there's been a lot of positions having a first-time Native

American in that position and that happened a lot with President Obama

because he really believed in trying to support on this community who again as

mentioned very underserved very under-resourced and so really working

even with youth and having this great gosh I want to say it was called

Generation X and I could be wrong but he and some of it was great that some of my

family was part of this where there was just thousands of Native youth that were

put together to meet with President Obama and Michelle Obama at that time

and and things progressed from there because students were able to share the

needs of their community of the things that they would wanted you know to be

successful individuals and in not only their own communities but just in in

them in in our own and just here today to be successful I'm contributing

individuals to society is what I'm trying to say so it has changed

constantly I mean just that quick little history of events of where you know

things we're trying to go good and then all of a sudden you terminate a hundred

tribes that again is based on the types of treble or the types of government or

who was in government and at that time and so that definitely is scary of where

we are currently and how that is potentially you know making more

harm than good to these communities and so you know one example is funding

there's a lot of funding that has been taken in a way that really unpreserved

not only the cultural way of life but education opportunity for youth but then

also for other segments of the population and so we're seeing a lot of

that unfortunate things happening because of our current administration

mostly that answers the question I'm trying to think of current past and all

that works with our relationship with the federal government I mean there's a

lot that I've learned even in our own work here because I think of a huge

graph that we got here to learn about the retail environment on tribal lands

and trying to learn about a tribal tribal Lee manufactured tobacco products

so tribes are making their own tobacco products for their own economic

infrastructure right and so anyways we have some of that work being done to

learn more about the retail environment to learn and we learned that our own

community is not using these products which is a good thing but we had this

federal funding from FDA and from the National Institute of Health and so when

our communities were learning that we had this funding from the federal

government they definitely did not want many of them were reluctant in working

with us because now that's with the federal government who was trying to put

a lot of these retail retailers trying to make sure that they were in

compliance with the federal rules meaning that they should not be selling

to minors which means that they should not be having a vending machine of

cigarettes which means they should not be selling loosies so part of our work

was to and to educate tribes of this happening because again you know they

have to abide by federal laws so then the tribes were worried that federal

governments we're going to come into their community and make them do certain

things but and so you've had some tribe I've had their own tribal police shoo

away federal federal folks that have come on to their own tribal land so it

gets really tricky it gets really that relationship is

definitely not a trusted one as you can see just with this example I gave but

there's just a lot of different things that happen and occur that again that's

why it's important to understand a little bit about tribal sovereignty and

then what does that mean with that federal government relationship but I'll

leave it at that I could go on and on all right well

thank you so much our next question is what are your thoughts on current

efforts regarding opioids in Native communities yes well so I only know of

this current a bit so I'm really happy that a lot of funding is coming out from

Samsa to address the opioid crisis in Native communities and populations and

so I'm hoping that folks our tribes and communities are applying for those for

those funds to be able to address it in their own communities I'm really happy

with the state here in California I've worked with a number of State

Department's before and so this Department of Health Care Services has

to be one of the most progressive in the sense that they're providing funds to

Indian country here in California to tribal communities the urban Indian

populations to address this and being

allowing them to have these funds to provide some services so medication

assisted treatment services these met programs that they have that they are

trying to address how to best promote training others with naloxone because

many folks have overdoses and so how can we try to prove them you reverse that

right so by providing the locks onto folks that have overdosed we can save a

life so they're doing a lot of training without end or doing a lot of with

suicide prevention as well so the funding is great and I hope that tribal

communities are applying for this because I know just here in California

it's a big issue and I know it's a big issue in other in other states as well

that have the population that are dealing with this issue right now so

that that I know in itself and there's a lot of work to be done and figuring out

what's what's the best way to reach these communities in in the most

appropriate and most cultural way in meeting their needs wonderful well thank

you so much for sharing that we're a little short on time so I'm going to ask

one more question for you dr. Soto it's actually another three-part question but

what online courses do you teach do you teach about this topic in your online

course and what other topics do you cover so online course I used to th the

P the PM 501 right the theory course but it's been a while because it's all of

this great funding that we have less time to teach so more I just do more

guest lectures in terms of just trying to address certain topics like these um

oh yeah so I mean we are trying to I'd love to have our own class

you know that's related to this topic and the Masters in public health but I

also know that I'm working with the School of Social Work and so we have a

course there I don't know if anybody is a dual degree with the mph and MSW but

we have an immersion program that takes graduate students to the Cheyenne River

Sioux Indian Reservation and then giving them the opportunity to make an impact

in this population so so that's where a lot of other topics are definitely

addressed and you get a whole semester of different issues regarding and how to

best reach these communities in public health efforts all right well thank you

so much again dr. Soto for sharing with us today I definitely want to thank our

speaker dr. Soto dr. Kumar who was also on the line as well as William Jardel

and I want to thank everyone who participated

pated in today's webinar I do want to let you know a copy of this recording

and slide presentation will be available shortly after this concludes today's

webinar thank you again everyone and have a wonderful rest of the day

great thank you have a wonderful day

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