Djiniyini Gondarra and Richard Trudgen discuss why Balanda are so frightened of COVID-19. It looks at the history of plagues and hygiene in Europe and the discovery of germs.
Richard Trudgen and Djiniyini Gondarra discuss how the virus is affecting smokers. Is it affecting other people? Dr Mills explains passive smoking and also the effects of smoking on unborn children, in relation to the Covid-19 virus.
Djiniyini Gondarra and Richard Trudgen discuss the traditional Yolŋu social distancing law, and they explore the right Yolŋu Matha word for virus. They also discuss the search for medicine for Coronavirus.
Maratja Dhamarrandji, Nikunu Yunupingu and Richard Trudgen discuss where the Coronavirus comes from. They talk about how it came from China and was transferred from bats to humans.
Timothy Trudgen and Biritjalawuy Gondarra discuss how nutritious foods can increase the immune system’s ability to fight and protect the body against infection.
Richard Trudgen and Djiniyini Gondarra discuss how lots of men are dying from COVID-19. Dr Mills tells the story about how, in China, most of the people who died from the virus were men.
Djiniyini Gondarra and Richard Trudgen discuss social distancing, physical distancing meaning. Djiniyini teaches the traditional Yolŋu law for social distancing
Maratja Dhamarrandji, Nikunu Yunupingu and Richard Trudgen discuss where the Coronavirus comes from. They talk about how it came from China and was transferred from bats to humans.
Rev Dr Djiniyini Gondarra and Richard Trudgen are joined by microbiologist, Dr Kerry Mills, to discuss how COVID-19 has travelled from China to other places around the world.
In this video, Djiniyini Gondarra and Richard Trudgen start working through the many outstanding questions that Yolŋu people still have about the COVID-19 vaccines.
Djiniyini Gondarra, Kerry Mills and Richard Trudgen talks through how the virus moves very quickly from China to other places and from one person to another person.
Rev Dr Djiniyini Gondarra and Richard Trudgen are joined by Dr Kerry Mills, who explains how coronavirus can move from one person to another in three different ways, when people cough, sneeze or speak.