8/13/16

Americans whose race might change


The 4.3 million Americans whose race could change when they die.

And
Twice as many Americans whose race was changed at birth!
 

In the US, there are two people
responsible for filling out
government paperwork about you,
after you die:

a medical certifier and a funeral director.
At birth there are also two,
a medical certifier and your doctor.

As a Native American
one must hope that the paperwork gets filled out correctly
or is not changed later!

Many births in and around the New England area
60 to 80 years ago,
papers were changed before the child even left the hospital.

I, for instance,

do not wish to be called an
American Indian,
Alaska Native
or
non of the above!
I am
and always will be
a member of
The Moiigans
(Maïngan – Yáw People).

This government can change the paperwork after my crossing.

However,

I will still be crossed
to my Ancestors,
along side of
Father Sky,
the Great Spirit,
and
Kiehtan.

No one on Mother Earth can change this fact!

I pray to
Kiehtan (Creator)
for a
 'Faith Blessing'
to those worrying
about this posting.

The 4.3 million Americans whose race could change when they die.

We all carry expectations about our own deaths:

to be respected, mourned, missed, by at least a few;
some kind of cultural ceremony or ritual;

a few last wishes dutifully carried out.

What you might not expect is to be assigned a new race.

In the US, there are two people responsible for filling out government paperwork about you, after you die:

a medical certifier and a funeral director.
 
The medical certifier records details like cause of death.
 
But in many states
it’s the funeral director
who’s responsible for
completing biographical sections:

where you died,
your educational background,
occupation,
race,
and
ethnicity.
These arbiters can produce some strange final records.

Research conducted over the last decade by the US National Center for Health Statistics shows that people of Asian, Hispanic, and especially Native American descent stand a surprisingly high chance of being mislabeled when they die.

Official US race and ethnicity demographics are tracked by self-reporting—that is, census.

Every 10 years, Americans fill out paperwork that lets the government know what race they consider themselves a part of, and whether they are of Hispanic origin.

After you’re dead, the person most qualified to state your race and ethnicity is still you.

But, well, you’re dead.

So according to the government, it’s up to funeral directors to submit that information for you.

Though each state might have slight variations on their certificate, the US government provides a standard for them to follow:

For black and white Americans, this system seems to work.

Research finds that mortality records for black and white people in the US are accurate:

They match what people say in census data.

But for some minorities, not so.

In a study published this month by the National Center for Health Statistics,

a part of the Centers for Disease Control, researchers looked at 3.8 million representative death records.

They found that for deaths from 1999 to 2011, 3% of Hispanic and Asian/Pacific Islander populations ended up misclassified as other races.

An astonishing 40% of American Indians and Alaska Natives

were also found to be misclassified,

as STAT News pointed out earlier this week.

The majority of deceased from those populations were misclassified as white, perhaps in part because interracial marriage among

American Indians is particularly common, and people might appear more white.

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