While we
were in Uganda we heard that my gorgeous sister-in-law had been diagnosed with breast
cancer. In Uganda we spent time with friends going through health heartache themselves.
While I don’t want to diminish the
enormity of a diagnosis of cancer, my sister-in-law had access to free tests
and scans and several consultants, and will have access to a comprehensive
treatment programme. Our Ugandan friends
were having to fund all their healthcare and for a diagnosis such as cancer, even
if services can be found, costs are likely to be prohibitive.
Have you
ever looked at health statistics for other countries compared to the UK? Here’s a few to get you started (from 2013)
courtesy of WHO
and the World Bank:
- Life expectancy at birth m/f (years): Uganda 57/61, UK 79/83
- Probability that a newborn baby will die before reaching age five (per 1,000 live births): Uganda 66, UK 5
- Probability of dying between 15 and 60 years m/f (per 1 000 population): Uganda 380/317, UK 88/55
Visit Uganda and you don’t see many
older people. Most families have stories
of infant or child death, or death from a preventable/ curable disease. At camp we had a minute’s silence to remember
a sponsored child who had recently died.
Some healthcare is free… but the only free clinics we’ve seen weren’t staffed by professional/ trained healthcare workers and medication is scarce. The ‘Global Fund’ provides grants for medication such as antiretroviral therapy (ART) to fight HIV and TB – then you read, ‘Uganda aims to increase coverage of ART to 69 percent of people living with HIV in 2017 from a baseline of 44 percent in 2014’. Depressing.
We saw a child who lost her feet due
to persistent infection and children born with HIV who didn’t have treatment and
consequently have on-going health problems.
We’ve seen children funded by NGOs
for a first surgery for congenital problems but then there’s no funding for subsequent
surgery – and they have residual deformities and health problems. When we lost our cases we found all the
prescription medications we needed – there was no shortage of drugs, but while
the cost was insignificant to us, in some cases one pill can cost half a day’s
wages.
And then there’s Global Care. I was so impressed by local staff. If children were ill they were taken to
clinic. Every day someone took food three times a day to the 6 children admitted
to hospital during camp. Sponsored children have access to medical
funds and there is a special fund for major health problems or surgery. Local staff go out of their way to make sure children
are well, and if not, transport them to clinics or hospitals and make sure they
have tests, medication or surgery they need. They support families with ill
children.
One morning Tom said to me ‘someone wants
to see you’. I turned round and saw a
pretty smiling teenager and my heart missed a beat as I recognised *Ekellot. I
was telling the team about her on the way up from Kampala as I felt sad
thinking about her. I suspected she would have died in the two years since we’d
been to Soroti. She had HIV and TB but was seriously depressed and not
compliant with her medications. She was extremely
ill, and not improving when we left her even though the local Global Care team
were doing all they could to get her medication and watch her taking her pills.
The staff told us that she became too
ill to be looked after at the centre and went back to her village. However, the
staff had passed her details to TASO (The
Aids Support Organisation). TASO provided support and counselling and she
became involved in their drama group visiting local schools and youth organisations
providing information about HIV/AIDs. Now
she was looking happy and healthy. Yes, I cried! Another girl we know well who
has HIV was also looking well and more cheerful than last time we saw her.
Good food, healthcare, transport, love
and security, education, working with local communities and support organisations,
and overall a commitment to provide for the most vulnerable children, that’s
why I support Global Care and why every year we continue with sponsorship.
*name changed and photos not of
children written about in this blog!
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