(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Indigenous peoples suffered disproportionately from the COVID-19 pandemic, experiencing a lack of sovereignty, limited infrastructure and discrimination in local healthcare systems that make them particularly vulnerable to infectious diseases. Yet little research exists to guide interventions and public health efforts tailored to remote-living Indigenous populations during pandemics. In Bolivia, for example, a team of researchers including UC Santa Barbara's Tom Kraft and Michael Gurven, and local collaborators, attempted to mitigate SARS-CoV-2's impact on the Tsimané, a small-scale Indigenous society living in remote areas of the Amazon via voluntary collective isolation.
https://www.miragenews.com/covid-19-spread-unhindered-in-remote-amazonian-1069931/#miragenews
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