福利姬自慰

3Qs at the U with Science Sam: (Ep. 5) Jennifer Brant on Indigenous Peoples and COVID-19

COVID-19 has served as a reminder of the devastating history that Indigenous Peoples have endured with infectious diseases. What still needs to be done to ensure the well-being of Indigenous communities?

In episode four of 3Qs at the USamantha Yammine 鈥 a University of Toronto alumna, neuroscientist and science communicator better known as Science Sam on social media 鈥 speaks with Jennifer Brant, an assistant professor at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, about how the structural inequities faced by Indigenous Peoples in Canada have left their communities particularly vulnerable to COVID-19.

鈥淸Government initiatives] all appear to be Band-Aid level responses that fail to address most of the structural inequities such as access to safe, clean drinking water,鈥 Brant says. 鈥淚 find it shocking that we鈥檙e still having this conversation today after years of calling attention to the issue.鈥

But Brant points to the creative and tangible ways that communities have been responding, such as protecting their elders from the disease. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 really inspiring is that we鈥檙e also seeing Indigenous communities come together virtually,鈥 she says. 鈥淎 big part of this is that sense of togetherness even though we鈥檙e separated physically.鈥

3Qs at the U is a weekly video series in which Yammine asks a 福利姬自慰researcher three questions on a timely topic. It鈥檚 produced by 福利姬自慰Scarborough interactive digital producer Cory Lawrence.

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