Produced by Global Health Media Project ([ Ссылка ]) in collaboration with Yoni Goodman.
Tok Pisin translation and narration: Medical staff of Ukarumpa Health Centre
Content review provided by experts from CDC, IFRC and UNICEF.
The full version of this animation includes Part 1 (transmission and protection) with the addition of a second part on staying safe while caring for a sick person at home.
The film starts by following two people who go to a market and shows how they spread the virus to others. Eventually, their whole neighborhood gets infected. The film then explains ways we can protect ourselves and those around us. The story continues as a woman gets sick with the virus. Her family stays home so they don’t infect others, and learn the rules that they need to follow to stay safe while caring for her.
The film makes the invisible coronavirus visible, and helps people grasp transmission in a simple and visual way. Through our experience with our animated films on cholera and Ebola, we learned that the image of the visible germ stays with people, helping them make the necessary behavior changes to protect themselves and others and prevent the disease from spreading.
This film is intended to help meet the need for better education and awareness that is critical in slowing the spread of this disease worldwide.
Director & Animator: Yoni Goodman
Producer & Story: Deborah Van Dyke
Associate producers: Peter Cardellichio, Mark Binder
English narration: Ayesha Casely-Hayford
Music, Sound FX and Mix: Uri Kalian, Sweetsound
This animation was produced with support from TEPHINET (Training Programs in Epidemiology and Public Health Interventions Network), LDSC (Latter-day Saint Charities), IFRC (International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies), and our individual and family donors from the Mad River Valley, Vermont, and beyond.
Copyright © 2020 Global Health Media Project
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