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MN honors cultural differences during AANHPI Heritage Month

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Friday, May 30, 2025   

Asian Americans, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders are a rapidly growing population in the United States - but as those living in Minnesota age, research indicates they're less likely to use hospice care or be familiar with end-of-life options.

The group group makes up about 5.5% of Minnesota's populations.

Ben de Guzman, director of the Office on Asian and Pacific Islander Affairs in the Washington, D.C., mayor's office and the son of Filipino immigrants, said cultural beliefs can hinder conversations about death and dying, and language also is a barrier.

"Because our communities don't speak English at the same rates as other communities do, being able to talk to doctors is a problem," he said, adding that also applies to "health insurers, especially within the context of death-or-dying legislation."

It's estimated more than 100 languages are spoken within Asian American and Pacific Islander communities. Many have participated in celebrations this month to mark AANHPI Heritage Month.

The Minnesota Legislature has considered a medical aid-in-dying bill in multiple sessions, but it has yet to move forward for a vote, despite a survey showing wide public support.

People in AANHPI communities typically live at home as they age, rather than in long-term care facilities or nursing homes. After working with the Diverse Elders Coalition, de Guzman said he got involved with the Compassion & Choices advocacy group to learn more about how different ethnic groups approach hospice and palliative care.

"There's a lot of cultural stigma that people have particularly around end-of-life care, different perceptions of death, that are informed by the cultural expectations and the cultural understandings our folks have around aging," he said.

The largest Asian communities in Minnesota are Hmong, Asian Indian and Chinese, and a significant portion are foreign-born, particularly Burmese, Indian and Chinese.

Conversations about death and dying between the AANHPI generations are easier than even a few decades ago, de Guzman said.

"We've been translating for our parents for 40 years," he said, "so we're better prepared to have these conversations than the community overall was 40 years ago."

Disclosure: Compassion & Choices contributes to our fund for reporting on Civic Engagement, Health Issues, Senior Issues, Social Justice. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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