© 2003 American Public Health Association
Everett R. Rhoades is with the Native American Prevention Research Center, University of Oklahoma College of Public Health, Oklahoma City. Correspondence: Correspondence should be addressed to Everett R. Rhoades, MD, Native American Prevention Research Center, University of Oklahoma College of Public Health, Rm 532, Rogers Bldg, 800 NE 15th St, Oklahoma City, OK 73104 (e-mail: everett-rhoades{at}ouhsc.edu).
Objectives. This study summarizes current health status information relating to American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) males compared with that of AI/ANfemales. Methods. I analyzed published data from the Indian Health Service for 1994 through 1996 to determine sex differences in morbidity and mortality rates and use of health care facilities. Results. AI/AN males death rates exceed those of AI/AN females for every age up to 75 years and for 6 of the 8 leading causes of death. Accidents, suicide, and homicide are epidemic among AI/AN males. Paradoxically, AI/AN males contribute only 37.9% of outpatient visits, versus 62.1% for females, and only 47% of hospitalizations excluding childbirth. Conclusions. AI/AN males suffer inordinately from a combination of increased burden of illness and lack of utilization of health care services. Programs targeted to anomie, loss of traditional male roles, and violence and alcoholism are among the most urgently needed.
Despite growing awareness that certain pathology disproportionately affects American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) males, there appears to be no systematic analysis of their health and illnesses. A review of MEDLINE citations since 1990 reveals no reports specifically about AI/AN males other than that by Joe for male college students.1 Analysis of AI/AN males health status requires comparisons with AI/AN females and with non-AI/AN males. Of these, the comparison that is currently most available is that between AI/AN males and AI/AN females. The reason for this is that there are practically no comparative data available in the medical literature. By contrast, the Indian Health Service (IHS) has a great deal of data permitting comparisons of AI/AN males with AI/AN females in its Trends in Indian Health2 (hereafter referred to as Trends). Currently, the IHS is almost the only source for data referring to health status and utilization of clinical services; therefore, this article will deal almost exclusively with IHS data and with comparisons between AI/AN males and AI/AN females.
The most recent compilation by the IHS2 provides information on the approximately 1.5 million AI/AN individuals to whom it has responsibility for the provision of health care. Although this population is a subset of the entire AI/AN population, it is the population for which most of the formal AI/AN health planning is done; therefore, it is reasonable that it be the focus of attention in this article. Available data include number and causes of deaths, number and causes of outpatient visits, and number and causes of hospitalizations by age and sex. The sources and certain weaknesses of the data are discussed in the annual IHS Trends. On the basis of these data, I have compared certain diseases and conditions between the sexes. For analysis of relative access to health care, I have summarized the number and types of clinical services utilized by each sex.
Deaths Table 1
Sex differences in the number and proportion of all deaths among AI/ANs aged 5 to 14 years are not as great, with 216 deaths of males, compared with 150 deaths of females. However, beginning approximately at age 15 years, the number of deaths of males greatly exceeds that of females for each age group up to age 75 years. Among males aged 25 to 34 years, there were 1368 deaths (9.6% of all male deaths); for females of this age group, the number was 635 (5.7% of all female deaths). These data yield a ratio of male-tofemale deaths of 2:2 for this age group.
Nearly one fourth (23.3%) of AI/AN male deaths occur by age 34 years, compared with only 15.9% of AI/AN female deaths. Nearly one half of all AI/AN male deaths occur by age 54 years; the comparable age for AI/AN females is 64 years. Conversely, 33.3% of AI/AN female deaths occur after age 75 years, compared with only 21.4% for AI/AN males. Table 2
Other differences in death rates are striking. For example, the death rate from accidents for males is 121.5 per 100 000, compared with only 53.0 per 100 000 for females. Similarly, the death rate from suicide for males is 29.8 per 100 000, compared with 7.2 per 100 000 for females. Suicide was the fifth leading cause of death for males, but only the tenth leading cause of female deaths. Among leading causes, the death rates for females exceeded those for males only for diabetes and cerebrovascular disease. The male-to-female ratio of mortality rates from all causes is 1.3:1; from heart disease, 1.4:1; from accidents, 2.3:1; from chronic liver disease, 1.3:1; from suicide, 4.1:1; and from pneumonia/influenza, 1.2:1. The number and rates of deaths associated with cancer is almost identical between the sexes, with 1936 male (rate = 95.7 per 100 000) and 1943 female (rate = 93.2 per 100 000) deaths.
Outpatient Visits and Hospitalizations
The 10 leading causes of hospitalization, excluding childbirth and associated conditions, are shown in Table 4
The data presented in Tables 1 and 2
The distribution of causes for hospitalization is illuminating in regard to the kinds of conditions to which AI/AN males seem especially prone (Table 4
Despite the clearly greater burden of illness and death for males, it is striking that they utilize both outpatient and inpatient services much less often than AI/AN females do. Although pregnancy and parturition are powerful motivators for clinic use, and therefore may condition females to seek health care, females appear to seek health care more than do males regardless of pregnancy and its associated conditions. Even excluding visits for childbirth, utilization of inpatient care by females significantly exceeds that by males (Table 4 The current data do not explain the cause of less frequent use of the health care system by males. It is important to remember that there are fewer elderly AI/AN males than females,2 and clinic visits and hospitalizations are far more frequent in this life stage. Analysis of age- and sex-specific utilization rates would help elucidate further the relative health care use by the sexes. The current data are consistent with the general understanding that AI/AN males, like other males, tend not to seek health care, but the data do not permit conclusions as to whether this tendency results from active health care avoidance or from institutional barriers to health care access that tend to exclude males compared with females. In keeping with the general emphasis on female rather than male health throughout the country, the IHS has tended to put in place programs for females rather than programs designed specifically for males.1 In any case, the disparity in health care utilization by sex is great enough that further study is warranted. AI/AN males face a combination of greater health risks and lower use of clinical care. How these might interact also is a topic worthy of further study.
The Epidemiological Transition Theory Olshansky and Ault6 proposed a tripartite fourth stage in which (1) rapidly declining death rates concentrate mostly in advanced ages and this decline occurs at nearly the same pace for males and females; (2) the age pattern of mortality rates by cause remains largely the same as in the third stage but the age distribution of deaths from degenerative causes shifts progressively toward older ages; and (3) relatively rapid improvements in survival are concentrated among the population in advanced ages. They call this stage the "age of delayed degenerative diseases." On the basis of the current data, AI/ANs do not appear to be experiencing this fourth stage. For example, although rates of death from heart disease and cancer are declining for the general US population, the same is not true for AI/ANs. On the contrary, deaths from heart disease appear to be increasing among the AI/AN population.7 Diabetes is another condition for which AI/ANs have not reached the fourth stage. In fact, diabetes mortality rates are increasing, especially among older AI/ANs,3 and much more rapidly than among the general population. This condition is the focus of enormous attention among AI/AN communities, with research and prevention efforts accelerating. It is likely that solutions for diabetes control will first be discovered among the AI/AN population.
Risk-Taking Behavior Certain risk-taking behaviors are not always higher among males than females. For example, Stevens, et al.11 reported that among a group of AI/AN drug users, females reported engaging in significantly greater levels of certain drug risk behaviors and sex risk behaviors than did males. Similarly, Nelson et al.12 reported that among Montana Indians, the prevalence of cigarette smoking among adolescent females (57%) exceeded that among adolescent males (45%). Gruber et al.13 also noted that similar risk-taking behavior was found among AI/AN females. These instances of greater risk taking by females compared with males, especially among younger age groups, are cause for concern and may herald increasing health problems among AI/AN females. This subject likewise calls for further study that could very well result in a reorientation of ideas related to risk taking by AI/AN females. Furthermore, ill health and risk-taking behavior are not evenly distributed among the AI/AN population. With few exceptions, risk taking is much higher among American Indians of the northern Plains states, especially compared with American Indians of the Southwest.14
Explanations for Increased Risk-Taking Behavior
Programs Designed for AI/AN Males Davies et al.22 characterized a group of male college students as being aware that they had important health needs, taking little action to address these needs, and having concerns about both physical and emotional health conditions, among which alcohol and substance abuse were the most important. The subjects indicated that the greatest barrier to health care, for them, was their need to be independent and to conceal vulnerability. Interestingly, the most frequent suggestions for improvement were to make health classes available, provide a health information call-in service, and develop a mens center. These findings suggest that college males, at least, are more concerned about health status and availability of health services than has been previously noted. Specific health programs directed toward AI/AN males tend to be rare or limited in scope, primarily consisting of a mix of educational materials and programs that includes leaflets, workshops, and conferences. However, organizations that provide health education materials for AI/ANs often do provide information specific to AI/AN males. The American Indian/Alaska Native Cancer Information Resource Center and Learning Exchange program at the Mayo Clinic (200 First St SW, Rochester, MN 55905, http://www.mayo.edu/nativecircle) provides information about cancers of particular interest to AI/AN males. The Native American Womens Health Education Resource Center (PO Box 572, Lake Landes, SD 57356) provides information about testicular cancer. The American Cancer Society (http://www.cancer.org) makes available a growing amount of information about cancers of particular interest to AI/ANs and a pamphlet titled What Men Should Know About Cancer. It is likely that many other such programs and activities are in place across the United States. A number of wellness conferences directed specifically toward AI/AN males are held each year. I suggest that the attention of programs designed for AI/AN males be focused on 3 major issues: (1) violence, especially among young adults; (2) cardiovascular diseases; and (3) cancer. The first of these is important because of its epidemic nature and high mortality, especially in early life, and the last 2 are important because of the many known factors and interventions that, if emphasized more strongly among AI/AN males, would be important factors in raising their health status. Interventions should be designed with attention to social and cultural attributes.23 Smith and Robertson24 reported a successful intervention that specifically targeted and took into account male reluctance to wear life preservers while boating and fishing. At the time the intervention was undertaken, drowning was the leading cause of injury deaths in Alaska, and life jackets were seldom used, so the Injury Prevention Program of the YukonKuskokwim Health Corporation initiated a "float coat" program. These coats not only provide warmth but also have built-in buoyancy, although they are unremarkable in appearance. It was reasoned that such coats would be acceptable in situations when the usual life preservers were not and would be worn in the course of work anyway. To promote the use of the float coats, a coalition of local leaders, health professionals, and merchants offered and promoted the coats at discounted prices in various sizes, colors, and styles. Local media cooperated with promotions. Following institution of the program, the number of deaths by drowning decreased by approximately 30%. Although it might be very difficult to alter traditional male social and cultural attitudes, special efforts to bring males into the health care system should succeed. Such an approach might be more successful in dealing with heart disease and cancer than with young AI/AN male violence. Studies, such as that reported by Brave Heart,25 of sex-specific psychological and emotional responses to both historical and personal stressful events, will undoubtedly prove useful in devising appropriate interventions. Brave Heart has shed important light on both the subtlety and the complexity that can characterize sex-specific responses and provides an important example for future investigations. In a similar vein, Krech26 summarized several reports relating to the loss of family and community roles traditionally held by AI/AN males and described how restoring such roles would help AI/AN males. Although controlled and comparative data are lacking, there can be little doubt that poverty, lack of available health services (especially in rural locations), and loss of a sense of community are all factors that have had a negative influence on AI/AN males (and AI/AN females) health. Such considerations must be taken into account in further health interventions, especially those directed toward AI/AN males. AI/ANs eligible for care through tribal and IHS programs have certain advantages compared with much of the general population. AI/AN communities, as tribes, are more readily defined populations, have existing health programs, and are part of an overall health care system. These conditions may permit greater opportunities for community activities to introduce and promote health interventions. But the pervasive poverty that exists in essentially all AI/AN communities requires other remedies. In addition, advocating for special programs for AI/AN males must take into account the already limited resources available for AI/AN health care. Despite these obstacles, it is clear that success will require further studies of the special circumstances contributing to the excessive morbidity and mortality rates for AI/AN males.
Recommendations
Preparation of this article was supported by Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Centers grant U48/CCU610817-08, funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Terri Olivas provided literature citations and assisted in the preparation of the article. Without the continued diligence of the Program Statistics Team of the Indian Health Service, the data for analysis would not be available. Dr Dorothy Rhoades reviewed the final article and made several useful suggestions.
Peer Reviewed Accepted for publication January 1, 2003.
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