Members of the White Mountain Apache tribe in Arizona have been infected with coronavirus at more than 10 times the rate of people in the state as a whole, yet their death rate is far lower.

On Native American Land, Contact Tracing Is Saving Lives

As the coronavirus spread on the Fort Apache reservation in Arizona, medical teams sought out residents who might have been exposed. The effort paid off in unexpected ways.

The coronavirus is raging through the White Mountain Apache tribe. Spread across a large reservation in eastern Arizona, the Apaches have been infected at more than 10 times the rate of people in the state as a whole.

Yet their death rate from Covid-19 is far lower, just 1.3 percent, as compared with 2.1 percent in Arizona. Epidemiologists have a hopeful theory about what led to this startling result: Intensive contact tracing on the reservation likely enabled teams that included doctors to find and treat gravely ill people before it was too late to save them.

A crucial tool has been a simple, inexpensive medical device: an oximeter that, clipped to a finger, detected dangerously low blood oxygen levels in people who often didn’t even realize they were seriously ill.

Contact tracing is generally used to identify and isolate the infected, and thereby to slow the spread of the coronavirus. Elsewhere in the United States, the strategy mostly is failing; the virus has spread too widely, and tracers are struggling to keep up.

But on the reservation, contact tracers have discovered effective new tactics as they trek from home to faraway home. They may not have been able to stop the virus, but they have managed to prevent it from causing so many deaths.

“This is really not about contact tracing cutting down spread,” said Dr. Arnold Monto, a professor of epidemiology and public health at the University of Michigan who was not involved in the project but reviewed the findings. “Do it right, and the mortality will be lower.”

“This could help with other hard-to-reach communities,” he added. “If we identify cases sooner, they won’t come in half dead with horrible lungs.”

This approach, which doctors at the Indian Health Service laid out recently in the New England Journal of Medicine, may offer a new strategy for reducing Covid-19 deaths in some of the hardest-hit communities, Dr. Monto and other experts suggested — especially among people of color who more often live in housing where multiple generations share space.

Dr. Vincent Marconi, director of infectious diseases research at Emory University in Atlanta, said it was “incredible” that contact tracing could have such an effect on a population so disadvantaged and at such high risk.

If the reservation’s methods have lowered death rates, he added, “then absolutely, without a doubt, this needs to be replicated elsewhere.”

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Dr. Ryan Close, left, an Indian Health Services physician, and J.T. Nashio, a community health worker, checked on Judie Declay, who lives on the Fort Apache reservation.Credit...Tomás Karmelo Amaya for The New York Times
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Dr. Close and Ms. Nashio visited Joseph Riley on the reservation. Inexpensive pulse oximeters, like those on his fingers, have proved invaluable in detecting patients who are infected and ill but don’t realize it.
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Dr. James McAuley, clinical director of the Whiteriver Indian Hospital, which serves the Apache community. He manages teams of contact tracers.

When the virus came to the Fort Apache reservation in April, doctors at the Indian Health Service were prepared to deploy contact-tracing teams to track the spread of the virus — and try to stop it.

“We were ready when it hit us,” said Dr. James McAuley, clinical director of the Whiteriver Indian Hospital, which serves the Apache community.

The reservation’s contact-tracing team includes 30 members. The day starts with a meeting at 8 a.m., in which each newly diagnosed case is assigned to a contact tracer and staff members review what they have learned about the people they are following.

Dr. Ryan Close, an Indian Health Service physician, writes the names of patients and contacts on four large whiteboards. Then the contact tracers — garbed in masks, gloves and gowns — set off in small teams to visit homes.

Each team includes a doctor and, when possible, community members like Grant Real Bird, a senior at Arizona State University who speaks the Apache language. His grandfather is well known to tribe members.

Many who are infected with the virus live in multifamily dwellings where isolation is impossible. Not only are members of the household exposed, but people with the virus often have also been out in the community for days with vague symptoms they did not realize signaled the start of an infection.

When the doctors started visiting the homes of infected people, many of whom were at high risk of complications because of underlying conditions like diabetes or obesity, they focused on testing their blood oxygen levels.

The coronavirus can impair the lungs in quiet, almost unnoticeable ways. People may not be gasping for breath, one of the classic signs of low oxygen levels, but the contact tracers often found their levels were perilously low. Without supplemental oxygen, these people risked permanent organ damage and death.

That led to a new strategy, Dr. Close said: “Contact tracing is a moderate end in itself, but the primary objective is to identify the high-risk individual” — those in grave danger from lack of oxygen. The team visits patients risking serious illness every day, and the moment their blood oxygen levels drop, they are taken to the hospital for oxygen therapy.

At the same time, the teams made another discovery. In the homes of coronavirus patients, the contact tracers noticed family members who did not look healthy. Often the signs were subtle, but the doctors, who know so many of the residents, recognized changes in complexion or energy levels.

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Grant Real Bird, left, a contact tracer who grew up on the reservation, interviewed, from left, Asia Kinney, Christine Kinney and Myrtis Norris.
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Whiteriver Indian Hospital. The Fort Apache reservation sits about three hours’ drive east of Phoenix, covering an area about the size of Delaware.
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A status board at the emergency operation center of the White Mountain Apaches.

The doctors asked family members who looked ill to take a brief walk around the room, or into the yard and back, with an oxygen monitor clipped to their fingers. Over and over, they saw the same thing — people who had oxygen levels so low they should be gasping for air. Yet they showed none of the expected symptoms.

“It’s a fairly common scenario,” said Dr. Dominick Maggio, director of the emergency department at Whiteriver Indian Hospital. “The team goes out looking for one person and finds someone else.”

One day the team visited Rolland Armstrong, 55, an emergency medical service technician who got infected with the virus. He looked pretty well but was deemed high risk because he had additional medical conditions.

“Each day he looked marginally worse,” Dr. McAuley recalled. “On our third visit, he came outside and sat on a bench, visibly breathless. We walked with him to the bird feeder in his yard and back.”

Mr. Armstrong’s blood oxygen level fell to the 80 percent range, far below normal. He was hospitalized and given oxygen. After he was discharged, Dr. Close returned to Mr. Armstrong’s home to check on him.

He was improving — but his wife, Ramona, 54, looked terrible. “I wasn’t feeling good,” she recalled. “I had a headache and a fever and body aches.”

She had tested negative for the coronavirus, but now Dr. Close did not believe the lab results.

“They asked me to walk in the yard,” she said.

Her oxygen level was lower than her husband’s had been. She ended up staying nine days in the hospital as she recovered from Covid-19.

Dr. Close worried about what happens if patients without obvious symptoms stay at home with very low oxygen levels. “Ramona was not on anyone’s plan,” he said.

Some researchers are now convinced that an expanded mandate for contact tracing, not genetics or some other hidden factor, explains the lower death rates on the reservation compared with the state.

Like other groups living in crowded conditions, the Apaches would be expected to have an alarmingly high death rate, Dr. Monto said.

“The higher impact in minority populations is not based on increased susceptibility of these populations, but rather higher infection rates and poorer outcomes based on late detection and underlying conditions,” he said.

But Dr. Douglas White, professor of critical care medicine at the University of Pittsburgh, said another factor might partly explain the low observed death rate among the Apaches: that aggressive contact tracing is finding people with mild symptoms who otherwise would not have been found, adding to the case count and decreasing the observed fatality rate.

Dr. McAuley said that might partly contribute to the lower number but could not be the whole story. The hospitalization rate among the Apaches is about 25 percent, similar to the national average.

“This suggests that as a group our identified patients are about the same as elsewhere,” he said.

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Rolland Armstrong, an emergency medical service technician who was infected with the coronavirus.
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Prayer ties and memorials on a fence with a coronavirus safety advisory sign on the the main street through Whiteriver.
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Dr. Close strolled with Larry Riley, a member of the White Mountain Apache tribe, to test his oxygen saturation levels.

Few dispute that identifying patients heading into serious trouble has a powerful human benefit: It may give family members a chance to say goodbye.

On a recent Saturday morning, Dr. Maggio visited the home of his fourth patient that day, looking for a woman who was supposed to have been discharged from the hospital but who was not home yet.

Adults were cooking breakfast, children were watching television. And in the back bedroom, Timothy Clawson Sr., 93, was lying in bed, feeling tired but not especially ill.

“I was chatting with him and put a pulse oximeter on his hand,” Dr. Maggio said. “It started blaring.” Mr. Clawson’s blood oxygen level was 65 percent, dangerously low.

Ordinarily, someone with such a low oxygen level would look as if he or she were dying, Dr. Maggio said: “They would be pale, breathing fast, leaning forward putting their hands on their knees, trying to get air.”

But Mr. Clawson had no idea he was so sick. The family persuaded him to go to the hospital. He survived for just a few days.

His death was peaceful, said his granddaughter, Tamara Ivins. When she and her aunt visited, “We reached out and held his hand,” Ms. Ivins said.

“He told me: ‘This is it. I am going to see Grandma. Be strong for me.’”

“I told him, ‘Grandpa, I am going to pray for you.’”

Mr. Clawson’s large family gathered outside the hospital and said goodbye on FaceTime.

Ms. Ivins approached the contact tracers afterward and told them how grateful she was for the time to be with her grandfather at the end.

“It was a formative moment for me,” Dr. Close said. “You can’t save everybody, but there is still a tremendous value in giving people time.”

Gina Kolata writes about science and medicine. She has twice been a Pulitzer Prize finalist and is the author of six books, including “Mercies in Disguise: A Story of Hope, a Family's Genetic Destiny, and The Science That Saved Them.” More about Gina Kolata

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: On Apache Reservation, Clues To Keeping Down Death Toll. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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