In this April 10 photo, Dr. George Blue Spruce poses at the dental clinic of A.T. Still University in Mesa, Ariz. Blue Spruce, the nation’s first American Indian dentist, is an assistant dean at A.T. Still University, where he is helping tribal members enter the world of medicine. The need for Native Americans in the health care professions has never been greater, but the obstacles standing between them and medical degrees are often daunting, if not overwhelming.
Native Americans being recruited for medical field
By
William Hermann, The Arizona Republic
Story Published:
May 21, 2009
Story Updated:
May 15, 2009
PHOENIX (AP) – For a young Hopi medical student, the problem was overcoming her culture’s view of handling a dead body.
For a Navajo student, it was learning to believe that he could become a doctor when every other kid in his graduating class was going to a trade school.
The need for Native Americans in the health care professions has never been greater, but the obstacles standing between them and medical degrees are often daunting, if not overwhelming. George Blue Spruce knows those obstacles first hand and has spent a lifetime helping others overcome them.
Blue Spruce, the nation’s first American Indian dentist, is an assistant dean at A.T. Still University in Mesa, where he is helping tribal members enter the world of medicine.
At 78, Blue Spruce has a long and distinguished resume. He founded the Society of American Indian Dentists and was assistant U.S. surgeon general from 1981 to 1986. He also wrote the original draft of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act in Title 1 of federal statutes.
Now “retired,” he is pursuing what he calls his true life’s work: Traveling the nation to tell young American Indian men and women that the medical professions need them, and perhaps more importantly, that their people need them to be in the medical professions.
Largely through his efforts, A.T. Still claims more American Indian dentists in training than any other school in the country. In addition, American Indians are being educated in osteopathic medicine and as physician’s assistants and athletic trainers.
Since Still’s dental college opened in 2002, eight American Indians have graduated with dental degrees, and 12 are “in the pipeline,” according to Carol Grant, Still’s director of American Indian Health Professions.
The numbers tell the story of the need.
With fewer than 150 American Indian dentists in the country, that means there is roughly one for every 32,000 American Indians, Grant said. The rate among the rest of the population is about one to every 1,200 people.
According to Frank Ayers, dean of student affairs at Creighton University’s School of Dentistry in Omaha, Neb., the need for Native American dentists is desperate, particularly in remote reservation areas where there are few health care resources.
“A report on oral health issued in 2000 by the American Dental Association showed that among Native American children, tooth decay rates are four times higher than the general population,” Ayers said. “Native American communities have very great needs for dental and medical services and little access to those services.”
Ayers said that every year, the nation’s 56 dental schools “average only about 30 Native American students enrolling in dental schools, and that’s not anywhere near enough to meet the needs of Native American communities.”
Ayers said the key to delivering dental care to Native American communities is recruiting dental students from those communities.
“If a student has a strong tribal affiliation when you bring them into the profession, they are much more likely to return to the reservation and help their people.”
The problem of dental care on reservations is so acute that a bipartisan bill, the Native American Full Access to Dental Care Act, was introduced in Congress in 2007 to address the situation, but it eventually died in committee.
But what Congress couldn’t get done, Blue Spruce hopes to do, even if only one student at a time. At A.T. Still University, Grant credits Blue Spruce with persuading hundreds of American Indians to seek careers in the health professions.
“He goes everywhere, to conferences, to schools, and his message to young people is that ‘you can do this, and you are needed,’” Grant said. “Dr. Blue Spruce is a very humble, quiet man, but when he speaks, he does so with authority and people listen.”
Blue Spruce does exude a quiet, even humble demeanor, but he is matter-of-fact about his own story. He attended the Santa Fe Indian School and got his dental degree from Creighton University.
“It all begins with the family, and it was the encouragement of my mother and father who grew up not reading, writing or speaking English,” Blue Spruce said. “Yet they saw that for me to be successful in the dominant society, I needed that piece of paper, that piece of character, called a college degree.”
When Blue Spruce got his DDS in 1956, he began a practice, but he also began talking to other American Indians about why they should go into medicine.
“I knew that for so many American Indians there is a lack of parental support and often no support from the extended family or from the tribe. And counselors in our Indian communities too often talk to students about a marketable skill right out of high school and not enough about going to college.”
Rowin Begay, 30, a first year osteopathic medicine student at A.T. Still who is from Rough Rock on the Navajo Reservation in northern Arizona, said his friends didn’t really think of college.
He said that he was fortunate to have a family that pressed him to be better, but even with that support, there have been challenges in medical school that others don’t face.
“There are cultural things. ... I’ve had to work hard to learn to be assertive, to speak publicly, to put myself forward.”
Grant credits Blue Spruce with helping find – and keep – students like Begay.
“He creates a sense of family when they come here, and he mentors them and advises them. He takes them under his wing and walks them through the whole system.”
Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
My husband and I have been trying to get our daughter "Cheyenne" into college this coming fall 2009. We do not qualify for any low income federal grant money for school, but our daughter has a great desire to be in Dentistry
field. She has just graduated from a Utah 5-A class high school. She has graduated in the top ten percent of her class with a GPA of 3.965. She has been ranked 50th out of 808 students graduating in her class June 4th, 2009 from Riverton High School, Riverton, Utah
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Tuesday, Jun 9 at 1:55 AM SYWinters wrote ...
My husband and I have been trying to get our daughter "Cheyenne" into college this coming fall 2009. We do not qualify for any low income federal grant money for school, but our daughter has a great desire to be in Dentistry field. She has just graduated from a Utah 5-A class high school. She has graduated in the top ten percent of her class with a GPA of 3.965. She has been ranked 50th out of 808 students graduating in her class June 4th, 2009 from Riverton High School, Riverton, Utah
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