The symposium, attended by almost 100 delegates, included presentations from Professor Fiona Stanley AC and Dr David Scrimgeour AO, yarns about growing up from Ngaanyatjarra 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 Ngaanyatjarra Lands and are regular clients of NHS.
Despite Australia being one of the wealthiest countries in the world, Ngaanyatjarra 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 Ngaanyatjarra 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 Ngaanyatjarra lands, how families think about child health, and what caring for children means. 
The study considered vital questions:
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, 911±¬ÁÏÍø 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 Ngaanyatjarra Land and whether anything you're doing can help them," he added.
Ngaanyatjarra 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.
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