Cargando…

Practicing Tribal Sovereignty Through a Tribal Health Policy: Implementation of the Healthy Diné Nation Act on the Navajo Nation

INTRODUCTION: The Navajo Nation is a large sovereign tribal nation. After several years of grassroots efforts and overcoming an initial presidential veto, the Navajo Nation passed the Healthy Diné Nation Act (HDNA) in 2014 to promote healthy behaviors in Navajo communities. This was the first such p...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Eddie, Regina, Curley, Caleigh, Yazzie, Del, Francisco, Simental, Antone-Nez, Ramona, Begay, Gloria Ann, Sanderson, Priscilla R., George, Carmen, Shin, Sonya, Jumbo-Rintila, Shirleen, Teufel-Shone, Nicolette, Baldwin, Julie, de Heer, Hendrik “Dirk”
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9717698/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36417292
http://dx.doi.org/10.5888/pcd19.220106
_version_ 1784842942296358912
author Eddie, Regina
Curley, Caleigh
Yazzie, Del
Francisco, Simental
Antone-Nez, Ramona
Begay, Gloria Ann
Sanderson, Priscilla R.
George, Carmen
Shin, Sonya
Jumbo-Rintila, Shirleen
Teufel-Shone, Nicolette
Baldwin, Julie
de Heer, Hendrik “Dirk”
author_facet Eddie, Regina
Curley, Caleigh
Yazzie, Del
Francisco, Simental
Antone-Nez, Ramona
Begay, Gloria Ann
Sanderson, Priscilla R.
George, Carmen
Shin, Sonya
Jumbo-Rintila, Shirleen
Teufel-Shone, Nicolette
Baldwin, Julie
de Heer, Hendrik “Dirk”
author_sort Eddie, Regina
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The Navajo Nation is a large sovereign tribal nation. After several years of grassroots efforts and overcoming an initial presidential veto, the Navajo Nation passed the Healthy Diné Nation Act (HDNA) in 2014 to promote healthy behaviors in Navajo communities. This was the first such policy in the US and in any sovereign tribal nation worldwide. PURPOSE AND OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to describe the process, implementation, and evaluation of the HDNA passage and its 2020 reauthorization and the potential for using existing and tribal-specific data to inform tribal policy making. INTERVENTION APPROACH: The HDNA included a 2% tax on unhealthy foods sold on the Navajo Nation and waived a 6% sales tax on healthy foods. HDNA-generated funds were allocated to 110 local communities for wellness projects. No funds were allocated for enforcement or compliance. EVALUATION METHODS: We assessed HDNA tax revenue and tax-funded wellness projects in 110 chapters over time, by region and community size. The food store environment was assessed for fidelity of HDNA implementation, price changes since pretax levels, and shopper behaviors. HDNA revenue was cross-matched with baseline nutrition behaviors and health status through a Navajo-specific Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System survey. RESULTS: HDNA revenue decreased modestly annually, and 99% of revenue was disbursed to local chapters, mostly for the built recreational environment, education, equipment, and social events. Stores implemented the 2% tax accurately, and the food store environment improved modestly. Regions with high tax revenue also had high rates of diabetes, but not other chronic conditions. The HDNA was reauthorized in 2020. IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC HEALTH: Sovereign tribal nations can drive their own health policy. Program evaluation can use existing data sources, tailored data collection efforts, and tribal-specific surveys to gain insight into feasibility, implementation, and impact.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9717698
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-97176982022-12-13 Practicing Tribal Sovereignty Through a Tribal Health Policy: Implementation of the Healthy Diné Nation Act on the Navajo Nation Eddie, Regina Curley, Caleigh Yazzie, Del Francisco, Simental Antone-Nez, Ramona Begay, Gloria Ann Sanderson, Priscilla R. George, Carmen Shin, Sonya Jumbo-Rintila, Shirleen Teufel-Shone, Nicolette Baldwin, Julie de Heer, Hendrik “Dirk” Prev Chronic Dis Implementation Evaluation INTRODUCTION: The Navajo Nation is a large sovereign tribal nation. After several years of grassroots efforts and overcoming an initial presidential veto, the Navajo Nation passed the Healthy Diné Nation Act (HDNA) in 2014 to promote healthy behaviors in Navajo communities. This was the first such policy in the US and in any sovereign tribal nation worldwide. PURPOSE AND OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to describe the process, implementation, and evaluation of the HDNA passage and its 2020 reauthorization and the potential for using existing and tribal-specific data to inform tribal policy making. INTERVENTION APPROACH: The HDNA included a 2% tax on unhealthy foods sold on the Navajo Nation and waived a 6% sales tax on healthy foods. HDNA-generated funds were allocated to 110 local communities for wellness projects. No funds were allocated for enforcement or compliance. EVALUATION METHODS: We assessed HDNA tax revenue and tax-funded wellness projects in 110 chapters over time, by region and community size. The food store environment was assessed for fidelity of HDNA implementation, price changes since pretax levels, and shopper behaviors. HDNA revenue was cross-matched with baseline nutrition behaviors and health status through a Navajo-specific Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System survey. RESULTS: HDNA revenue decreased modestly annually, and 99% of revenue was disbursed to local chapters, mostly for the built recreational environment, education, equipment, and social events. Stores implemented the 2% tax accurately, and the food store environment improved modestly. Regions with high tax revenue also had high rates of diabetes, but not other chronic conditions. The HDNA was reauthorized in 2020. IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC HEALTH: Sovereign tribal nations can drive their own health policy. Program evaluation can use existing data sources, tailored data collection efforts, and tribal-specific surveys to gain insight into feasibility, implementation, and impact. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2022-11-23 /pmc/articles/PMC9717698/ /pubmed/36417292 http://dx.doi.org/10.5888/pcd19.220106 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Preventing Chronic Disease is a publication of the U.S. Government. This publication is in the public domain and is therefore without copyright. All text from this work may be reprinted freely. Use of these materials should be properly cited.
spellingShingle Implementation Evaluation
Eddie, Regina
Curley, Caleigh
Yazzie, Del
Francisco, Simental
Antone-Nez, Ramona
Begay, Gloria Ann
Sanderson, Priscilla R.
George, Carmen
Shin, Sonya
Jumbo-Rintila, Shirleen
Teufel-Shone, Nicolette
Baldwin, Julie
de Heer, Hendrik “Dirk”
Practicing Tribal Sovereignty Through a Tribal Health Policy: Implementation of the Healthy Diné Nation Act on the Navajo Nation
title Practicing Tribal Sovereignty Through a Tribal Health Policy: Implementation of the Healthy Diné Nation Act on the Navajo Nation
title_full Practicing Tribal Sovereignty Through a Tribal Health Policy: Implementation of the Healthy Diné Nation Act on the Navajo Nation
title_fullStr Practicing Tribal Sovereignty Through a Tribal Health Policy: Implementation of the Healthy Diné Nation Act on the Navajo Nation
title_full_unstemmed Practicing Tribal Sovereignty Through a Tribal Health Policy: Implementation of the Healthy Diné Nation Act on the Navajo Nation
title_short Practicing Tribal Sovereignty Through a Tribal Health Policy: Implementation of the Healthy Diné Nation Act on the Navajo Nation
title_sort practicing tribal sovereignty through a tribal health policy: implementation of the healthy diné nation act on the navajo nation
topic Implementation Evaluation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9717698/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36417292
http://dx.doi.org/10.5888/pcd19.220106
work_keys_str_mv AT eddieregina practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation
AT curleycaleigh practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation
AT yazziedel practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation
AT franciscosimental practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation
AT antonenezramona practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation
AT begaygloriaann practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation
AT sandersonpriscillar practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation
AT georgecarmen practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation
AT shinsonya practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation
AT jumborintilashirleen practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation
AT teufelshonenicolette practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation
AT baldwinjulie practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation
AT deheerhendrikdirk practicingtribalsovereigntythroughatribalhealthpolicyimplementationofthehealthydinenationactonthenavajonation