Racialization As A Barrier To Achieving Health Equity For Native Americans

Abstract

Racial identity is a complex idea, particularly for American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) populations. The idea of a single AI/AN race developed from a European-American view of phenotypic and cultural differences. It continues to have significant consequences for AI/AN populations within the clinical-medical context. For clinicians, using this flawed category in medical decision making poses ethical challenges and has implications for patient autonomy and justice. This article briefly traces the development of the idea of an AI/AN race, the concerns raised in using this identity marker, and the ethical implications of employing the categorization.

Related Resources

SEARCH

Request a Speaker

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
First Name(Required)
Last Name(Required)
MM slash DD slash YYYY
Event Time
:
Please share a brief description (around 200 words) of the event you'd like us to speak at, and let us know if you have a specific NIHB representative in mind for this request.
Will your organization be providing an Honorarium or Travel Support?(Required)

Heroes in Health Awards Banquet

Join us on Wednesday, August 19th for the 2026 Heroes in Health Awards Banquet, presented at NTHC 2026. Register by 7/2, and be the first to know when our musical guests and keynote speaker are revealed.