ËÄÉ«AV


Blog Layout

ËÄÉ«AV Symposium casts a vision for stronger child health outcomes on the lands.

The ËÄÉ«AV Health Service presented the ËÄÉ«AV Aboriginal Child Health Symposium in Walyalup | Fremantle on April 10-11. 


The symposium, attended by almost 100 delegates, included presentations from Professor Fiona Stanley AC and Dr David Scrimgeour AO, yarns about growing up from ËÄÉ«AV women, and an overview of the Council's strategic plans for health by the Council's CEO, Thomas Williams.

Around 350 Aboriginal Children aged 0-9 years live on the ËÄÉ«AV Lands and are regular clients of NHS.


Despite Australia being one of the wealthiest countries in the world, ËÄÉ«AV children have a health status and social circumstances comparable to low-income countries.


The underlying factors for this disparity are complex, interrelated and intergenerational, creating a seemingly inescapable cycle.


The symposium was also an opportunity to present Tjilku Walykumunu: The ËÄÉ«AV Health Service Child Health Study - a landmark 85,000-word report providing qualitative findings to inform health strategy for our children on the lands over the next decade.


Inge Kral prepared the study with a team comprising Angelica McLean, Lloyd Durie, Annie Tangey, and Rosalie Schultz. They sought to understand the factors that might contribute to poor child health outcomes on the ËÄÉ«AV lands, how families think about child health, and what caring for children means. ï»¿

The study considered vital questions:


  • What is going on in families around children's health and nutrition?
  • What is happening around homes that affects children's health?
  • What are ËÄÉ«AV people's attitudes, beliefs and practices?
  • Understanding the mismatch between how health and nutrition services are delivered and how families understand them.
  • Understanding the mismatch between family understanding of what is essential in childhood and health professionals' understanding. 

Most broadly, the study demonstrated that the best child health outcomes are a product of strong families, adequate housing and reduced overcrowding within households.


From those three core themes cascade a subset of recommendations and potential outcomes that reverberate across education, healthy choices, treatment and testing facilities, and housing strategy.

Speaking at the symposium, ËÄÉ«AV Council CEO Thomas Williams encouraged delegates to contribute to positive change for children on the lands.


"This Child Health Study has much to make you despondent, but there are also glimmers of hope," he said.


"I encourage you to be part of the catalyst for delivering genuine change for our people on the Lands. In the work that each of you is doing, consider the children on the ËÄÉ«AV Land and whether anything you're doing can help them," he added. 

ËÄÉ«AV elder Preston Thomas echoed Thomas's encouragement:


"Progress might be slow and start small, but I believe we can do this," he said.


"For aboriginal people on the land, we struggle. We can't do it alone; our hand is up for help. Together, we can do this. We can change the next generation for the mob on the Lands,


"The time for change is now. I've already seen change happening. We need to keep doing the right things to make it better," Preston said.

There's no doubt about Yarnangu's aspirations—for their families and their children's health. They want to flourish in every sense—physically, socially, economically, and culturally—to thrive in the country and enjoy healthy outcomes in strong families. The symposium is one more dimension to the progress that is being made towards these aspirations. 

Related News

By Natasha Perkins 10 May, 2024
Supplying food and fresh produce to the remote communities of ËÄÉ«AV Lands isn’t your typical grocery run, it’s a fortnightly process involving ordering, scheduling and a whole lot of driving! The scope and scale of travelling through the Western Desert would be difficult to conceive for your typical city driver who occasionally takes a trip ‘down south’! NATS’s (ËÄÉ«AV Agency and Transport Services) driver, Rod Moiler, a stalwart and icon of the organisation for over three decades, shared some insight into what it looks like to bring supplies into the eleven communities that form the ËÄÉ«AV Council. “For 33 years, my rhythm was a fortnightly run that began on Wednesday with a pick-up of the big order from FAL (now Metcash) in Canning Vale. From there, it would be back to NATS in Welshpool, and on Thursday, we would get deliveries for each community in order, as well as any other supplies that needed to be distributed,” Rod said. “I’d also make sure that I had the truck fully sorted and good to go with other supplies that may be helpful to others along the way—extra water, fresh fruit from my fruit trees at home, puncture kits to help other travellers out of a tight spot, and newspapers for the graders,” “On Friday, I’d haul out of Perth, usually stopping outside of Kalgoorlie,” “By Saturday, all going well with the weather and breakdowns—never a sure thing—I’d be driving in Warburton. It’s never a sure thing because conditions are variable. The Western Desert experiences soaring temperatures that remind you to ensure your air-con is in good working order, but also experiences flash flooding that can get derail even the most experienced driver. “There was a time when I was stuck in Laverton for a week waiting for the road to be drivable, and another when I did a load out to Alice Springs and back because it was impossible to drive west, but the need was desperate, so I headed east,” Rod said. “There were other times where I got stuck in one of the communities because of the weather. I’d end up helping the store owners with some welding or stacking the shelves to fill in the time before I could get back out on the road,” he adds. Rod took the initiative to bring newspapers for the operators of the road graders as well as fresh fruit. He figured out quickly enough that everyone helps each other in these remote places, and he might need some road grading to make a delivery before too long. More than once, those operators drove through the night to clear a path so Rod could make his next delivery. As Rod would make his way out of Warburton on a Sunday, it would be along a route that became increasingly familiar. “As I went from Jameson to Wanarn and on to each of the communities, I’d be delivering as well as backloading,” “There’d be different supplies that needed to head back to Perth—from the Education Department or Police, or even a stranded tourist or their car—they’d be loaded on board as I made my way around the lands,” “By Tuesday, I’d be back in Warburton, backloading anything from there before heading back to Perth on Wednesday morning,” Rod says. “I’d arrive back in Perth late Thursday afternoon and then unload all the backloaded supplies at NATS,” “Then, I’d spend the weekend with my family before spending Monday and Tuesday servicing the truck and getting it ready to do it all again on Wednesday!” Unsurprisingly, Rod has clocked up plenty of kilometres out on the Lands. Over his career, a conservative estimate of 70,000 kilometres each year adds up to nearly 2.5 million kilometres on the road. He speaks fondly of his trucks, favouring Macs above all others across the years. “Five of my seven trucks have been Macs. My last one was six years old when I bought it. By the time I got it, it had already travelled 1.5 million kilometres on a regular Perth to Darwin run. I probably put another 500,000 kilometres on that one,” Rod says. Numbers like this are a healthy reminder of the challenges of remoteness, including the challenge of getting fresh supplies to the lands. It’s certainly not a quick run to the store to get a few things for dinner. There are schedules, orders, forward planning, weather, breakdowns, and setbacks amongst the rich and rewarding long hauls. Rod Moiler was one of the first drivers for NATS. He played a pivotal role in the early days, not only behind the wheel but also mentoring new drivers on the nuances of efficiently packing and navigating the challenging 900 kilometres of dirt road to Warburton and beyond. While Rod retired in 2020, his legacy continues as he shares his invaluable experience with new drivers, ensuring that the quality and reliability of NATS remain strong, sustaining the lands with all the supplies that have become a reliable lifeline.
By Natasha Perkins 01 May, 2024
750 kilometres a day for nearly two weeks in a car on its last legs sounds like a recipe for disaster, but Shitbox Rally first timers, Jocelyn Bennett and Foysal Ahmed, got the job done while raising over $8,000 for cancer research.
By Natasha Perkins 01 May, 2024
Strong homes and strong stories are at the heart of the aspirations of the members of communities on ËÄÉ«AV lands. The last six months have seen a steady stream of engagements and action within these communities as they have co-designed and collaborated on Community Plans to help their communities flourish. These plans have been developed by the communities, for the communities, and for delivery by the community alongside key stakeholders. Importantly, these Community Plans have now been accepted, giving a green light to opportunities, strategies, and activities that can better resource remote communities and provide greater access to services, which we understand need to be improved in many ways. The recent activation programs over the school holidays represented another key outcome of our Community Plans—creating spaces and places for our young people to engage and flourish on country. These programs involved many of our communities, with major hubs at Warburton, Warakurna, and Warnarn. Our Plans reflect our aspirations for Ngurra Rapa, Tjukurrpa Rapa (Strong homes, Strong stories) to fulfil our collective vision of purpose and agency —communities where members are encouraged and supported to thrive. “Our Community Plans provide community-informed guidance to the ongoing activities and investment into the community for members, businesses and government,” said ËÄÉ«AV Council CEP Thomas Williams. There are plenty of opportunities for members of ËÄÉ«AV communities to be engaged in these plans, and we believe there will be significant employment opportunities in some of our communities. “Our vision is to support the ËÄÉ«AV people to live healthy, fulfilled lives on the lands - places of flourishing where the aspirations of Yarnangu are realised as we work together towards strong families, strong stories, and strong futures on the lands,” Thomas said. The intersecting impacts of remoteness, ineffective social support, insufficient social services, and the high cost of living have made our people some of the most disadvantaged in the nation. “One of the major sources of disadvantage has been the changing face of CDP and ‘work for the dole’ policies, which have been punitive and negatively impacted communities,” Thomas said. “Seeing these community plans not only accepted but moving to implementation is a significant milestone in identifying the potential, opportunities and the resourcing of each of our ËÄÉ«AV communities,” Thomas said. “It’s an exciting phase that we now enter as we’re seeing these community aspirations begin to shape and transform communities as stakeholders and government join us in building vibrant spaces on the lands and addressing head-on the genuine challenges and disadvantages that face our people in these remote communities,” Thomas said. The Community Plans will continue to fuel opportunities as each element is activated and the future of living on the lands becomes brighter for many.
View All News
Share by: