[1][2] She has been profiled in two BBC documentaries: Dead Mums Don't Cry (2005), charting her efforts to reduce the mortality rate of pregnant and childbearing women, and Grace Under Fire (2009), reporting on her involvement in a reproductive healthcare programme in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
She worked alongside fellow Chadian physician Mariam Brahim from 1997 to 2006, coordinating a country-wide program promoting popular education for children's health in 1999.
[3] In 2005, the BBC presented Dead Mums Don't Cry, a documentary on Kodindo's efforts to reduce the number of women in Africa who die during pregnancy or childbirth.
[7] The publicity led to the founding of a nonprofit organization "Hope for Grace Kodindo" for funding health programmes for women in poor African countries.
"[3][9] That year she was awarded the Millennium Development Goal Torch by the Danish Government for striving to provide reproductive healthcare for women throughout the world.