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The second annual Deadly Cup Carnival delivered on its promise of being bigger and deadlier when the Indigenous initiative took place in Darwin last Sunday. NRL NT supported the Cup, which staged seven rugby league matches in various male and female age groups and attracted about 2500 spectators to Territory Rugby League Stadium. The brainchild of Deadly Enterprises director Shaun Tatipata, the Deadly Cup was organised to celebrate NAIDOC Week while promoting positive health and wellbeing in the community. The weekend s success followed the inaugural Cup last November. We came up with the concept [because] we were looking to raise awareness and support for an Indigenous eye clinic that we were trying to set up, said Tatipata, a proud Wuthathi and Ngarrindjeri man with more than 20 years experience as an Aboriginal Health Worker. ....
Indigenous health practitioner helping Queensland Close the Gap ThuThursday 25 updated ThuThursday 25 Dani Beezley says she always knew she wanted to work with Aboriginal people. ( Share Print text only Growing up, visiting the doctors made Dani Beezley uncomfortable. The Wulli Wulli and Wakka Wakka woman was raised in the rural town of Theodore in central Queensland. While the 32-year-old has fond memories of visiting her local GP, she remembers sharing uneasy feelings with family when they had to approach others. I didn t really feel that comfortable, and I know that my parents didn t as well, she said. I think that might ve been because there weren t as many things put in place to make Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people feel safe and comfortable. ....
Share on Twitter A Year Like No Other is an SBS News collaboration with the University of Technology Sydney. It features stories written by journalism students. When Teresa Trindall thought coronavirus had reached the small, remote town of Coonamble in north-west New South Wales earlier this year, she was terrified. The Gamilaroi woman was on the frontline, working as a nurse at the local hospital, and is a registered Aboriginal Health Worker. Her niece, who lived with Teresa s elderly mother, received a false positive COVID-19 test. Gamilaroi woman Teresa Trindall. Fleur Connick “It was an extremely difficult period. My mum has had breast cancer, she s a bad asthmatic, she s got a pacemaker in, and she would often call me crying on the phone,” Teresa says. ....