
Bad water and inadequate housing is leading to a "dramatic increase
in invasive disease" in First Nations north of Sioux Lookout, Ont.,
according to research published in the Canadian Journal of Rural Medicine.
Northwestern Ontario, home to 10 remote First Nations that haven't had
safe tap water in more than a decade, is seeing one of the highest rates of
community-associated MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) in
Canada, the study said.
The infection which typically causes boils or abscesses is taking a more
invasive form in the remote First Nations that were studied, leading to 23
cases of sepsis and pneumonia during a two-year period. The rate of infection
is approximately 20 times higher than the city of Calgary, which was subject to
a similar study.
Bad water: Northern Ontario First Nations push for a fix
'Third World' conditions on First
Nations in Canada
Neskantaga First Nation: 5 people whose daily life revolves around
getting clean water
"Poverty kills," said Dr. Mike Kirlew, a doctor who works in
Sioux Lookout and serves remote First Nations in northern Ontario.
Dr. Mike Kirlew
Dr. Mike Kirlew says inadequate housing, a lack of safe water and
inferior health care delivery in remote First Nations are the "perfect
storm" leading to high rates of invasive infections. (Blue Earth
Photography)
"This is a bug that takes advantage of the overcrowded housing, the
lack of clean water and the inferior health care delivery," Kirlew said.
"It's a recipe for disaster."
People who live in close conditions without safe running water for
cleaning are more likely to have bacteria on their skin that becomes an
invasive infection, he said.
Once the infection breaks the skin and gets into the blood it can affect
the lungs, liver, heart and bones.
The Chief of Neskantaga First Nation says the majority of children on
his reserve have sores like these on their bodies. Chief Wayne Moonias says
with limited access to doctors and nurses it is impossible to know if the sores
are caused by contaminated water or other third world living conditions in the
community. (submitted )
Community associated MRSA is different than the so-called hospital super
bug.
"I would call it a bug with a resistance pattern that makes it
difficult to treat," Kirlew said.
Even drastic intervention with antibiotics wouldn't make as much
difference in the infection rate as "giving the community safe running
water," he said.
Kirlew also worked on recently published research showing the rate of
rheumatic fever in the same remote First Nations is 75 times higher than the
rest of Canada.
"These are medical conditions that have socio-economic
causes," he said.
Nishnawbe Aski Nation, the political treaty organization that represents
the First Nations in the study, said on Monday the research shows there is a
health crisis in the communities that requires immediate solutions.
"Such high rates of infectious diseases are a shocking indictment
of a broken health care system," said Deputy Grand Chief Terry Waboose.
"The normalization of second-class citizenship by First Nations living
on-reserve is unacceptable and must be a call for action."
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