https://ift.tt/uRtLh4 U.S. government initiative to ship half a billion free COVID-19 tests to Americans will struggle to reach one of the communities that has been hardest hit by the pandemic — Native Americans living on rural reservations.
The administration launched a website — COVIDTests.gov — on January 19, which links to an online U.S. Postal Service order form where people can sign up for four free tests per household.
But experts say it is unclear how the tests will reach families living in places like Vanderwagen, New Mexico, a rural community of about 2,000 citizens spread out across 440-square kilometers of the Navajo Nation.
Most of the residents live on unpaved roads that have no names and in houses that are unnumbered. Residents who want to receive mail must rent a post office box, according to E.J. John, a research analyst at Arizona State University’s American Indian Policy Institute and a citizen of the Navajo Nation who grew up in Vanderwagen.
“The post office closed down a couple of years ago,” he said, explaining that USPS has since set up a pair of cluster mailboxes just outside the local trading post. But not everyone can afford to pay the required six months’ rent at a time, John said.
“You’ll see multiple names on one box,” he said. “A lot of people just often end up sharing them.”
Folks in Vanderwagen, as in other rural tribal communities across the U.S., face other challenges in getting the tests.
“Anything that requires you to log on to a website and put in an address, whether for shopping online or trying to sign up for auto insurance, it’s a challenge,” John said.