A/HRC/33/57
Education
55.
Education is a key underlying determinant of health for indigenous peoples.
Illiteracy rates are frequently high (CERD/C/EDU/CO/20-22) and indigenous children are
significantly less likely than non-indigenous children to attend school, which undermines
health through decreased health literacy and loss of the numerous, indirect benefits of
higher educational attainment. Lower educational attainment is “inextricably tied” to
homelessness and the overrepresentation of indigenous peoples in the prison system.32
Decreased participation in formal education is frequently the result of a combination of a
lack of availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality. Even where services are
accessed, boys and girls record different completion rates: for instance, 89 per cent of
indigenous girls in Peru aged 12-16 drop out of school (see A/HRC/29/40/Add.2, para. 68).
56.
States should do more to provide redress for these health rights violations. Investing
in indigenous children’s early development through education and providing support to
families (e.g. around parenting) are highly effective means of reducing health inequalities.
States should cooperate to ensure the adoption of effective interventions: for instance,
nurse-family partnerships have been adapted for use in indigenous communities following
evidence of effectiveness in the United States of America.33 At the primary and secondary
levels, educational facilities should be made available and accessible by States, including
through radio broadcasts and long-distance education programmes or through the
establishment of mobile schools for nomadic indigenous peoples (general comment
No. 11).
Family and community integrity
57.
The importance of healthy communities and families to indigenous children cannot
be underestimated. Such support networks provide physical, mental and social health
benefits, help to break entrenched cycles of intergenerational disadvantage and build
resilience and capability. The Committee on the Rights of the Child has noted, in its general
comment No. 11, that maintaining the best interests of the child and the integrity of
indigenous families should be primary considerations in the development of health and
other programmes. Unfortunately, indigenous children are still removed from their homes
at a significantly higher rate than their non-indigenous counterparts, which can cause
significant childhood trauma. Moreover, indigenous children are vulnerable to abuse while
in the care of the State. States should prevent and provide redress for any action that
deprives indigenous peoples, including children, of their ethnic identities, such as
placement of indigenous children in alternative care.
Mental health
58.
The high prevalence of mental illness and suicide among indigenous peoples is
alarming, particularly among indigenous youth. There are various protective factors and
preventive strategies for suicide, including strong cultural affiliations (A/HRC/21/53). One
systematic review found that school-based suicide prevention strategies reduced depression
and feelings of hopelessness and that “gatekeeper” training (teaching specific community
groups how to identify and support individuals at high risk of suicide) increased the
32
33
Submission by Brenda Gunn, University of Manitoba, Canada.
Submission by Australia.
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