REHABILITATION OF 300 CEREBRAL PALSY CHILDREN

by Child and Family foundation uganda
REHABILITATION OF 300 CEREBRAL PALSY CHILDREN
REHABILITATION OF 300 CEREBRAL PALSY CHILDREN
REHABILITATION OF 300 CEREBRAL PALSY CHILDREN
REHABILITATION OF 300 CEREBRAL PALSY CHILDREN
REHABILITATION OF 300 CEREBRAL PALSY CHILDREN
REHABILITATION OF 300 CEREBRAL PALSY CHILDREN

Project Report | Jun 23, 2022
Cerebral Palsy Community Rehabilitation Program

By Oyo Peace Michelle | Program Officer

Child and Family Foundation in partnership with baby Ubuntu conducted five days of training on cerebral palsy targeting Caregivers, Village health teams, community leaders, and staff. The training commenced on the 6th of June and ended on the 10th of June, in attendance were 19 participants (14F/5M) conducted in CFU space. The training was fully officiated by the Ubuntu coordinator Racheal with a remarkable opening to the participants majorly giving a brief background of how Ubuntu evolved and why this training. During the training, the standard definition of early childhood intervention was disseminated to mean a process of providing specialist interventions and support services early in life after the onset of identifying a problem. It was shared that the first year of a cerebral palsy-affected child was a very sensitive development period for motor, skills, communication, and self-care. Due to early brain injury, we were advised to give timely support to the child and family immediately after identification in form of family support, counseling, therapy, positioning, feeding along with several other anticipated unknown challenges of childhood disability.

The major aim of this program training was to supplement the getting to know the cerebral palsy program to include children as young as 6 months. Through earlier interventions designed to enhance a child’s development in the first few years after birth, we had greater opportunities to positively influence the caregiving environment and participation of the child’s participation of the child in the family and community life as well as limit developmental and cognitive imparities.

Training content/modules

During the training, several modules were disseminated including Getting started (About the program, Running session, Conducting a home visit), Know your child, Positioning and carrying, Eating and drinking, Learning to move, Communicating, Play and stimulation, Everyday activities, Togetherness and belonging Our community.

Aims/Objectives of conducting the training

  • To increase the knowledge and confidence of caregivers regarding their children’s condition and their needs
  • To encourage positive attitudes toward having a child with a disability within the family
  • To improve problem-solving and peer support amongst caregivers
  • To promote the inclusion of children within the family and community
  • To equip participants with skills to care for their children and promote optimum development and reduce further disability eg  contracture, limb, deformities
  • To enable early identification and management of malnutrition
  • To support parents in identifying common health problems seizures and pain and assist them to treat them quickly.

The training approach Used for the training

  • Participatory approach
  • Specialized trainers from Baby Ubuntu
  • Training facilitator manuals
  • Case studies
  • Best practices as shared by caregivers and parents

Training Reflection

What went well during the training?

The togetherness of all participants (medical, program. caretakers VHT)

The participatory approach of the training

Use of sieve as a food preparation process for CP affected children’s feeding

Ice breakers were brilliant

Being invited to attain the training was appreciated by the participants

Feeding training sessions

Encouragement and hope attained as training progressed showed caregiver had support and were not alone

Use of locally available materials to create play toys and role play

Feed backing session was very educative

Roll play despite differences in work and roles

Hands-on especially on the positioning of Cerebral palsy children

What did not go well during the training?/Challenges

Poor time management by participants

Language barriers especially when it came to role play

Luganda manuals in Luganda challenging for caregivers to read as much as they spoke and understood Luganda.

First-time use of kits for some caregivers to use during training

Inability to read for some of the community members or caregivers

Evaluation forms were challenging to answer and conceptualize

Module two is very challenging and the need or emphasis for further training on it specifically

Best practices shared and learned during training

  • Learned better ways of working with children living with Cerebral Palsy children
  • Learned better ways to handle stigma and fear of children living with Cerebral Palsy.
  • Learnt child protection guidelines specifically for children living with cerebral palsy
  • Attained positioning techniques for handling and caring for children with cerebral palsy
  • Practicing patient handling  children with cerebral palsy
  • Attained skills in feeding and supporting techniques
  • Attained skill in capacitating communities to fight stigma
  • Created a team to support and handle cerebral palsy in the communities

Recommended applicable ways to implement the CP project

Use empowerment process where we build capacities of communities and caretakers for sustainability and continuity of the project.

 Keep focused on children and families specifically leaving with the condition while using targeted needs-based assistance.

As an implementing organization takes positive and negative criticism as a learning and stepping stone to the growth of the project.

Staff attaining skills in basic counseling that are key in working and handling beneficiaries living and those affected by the condition.

Use of locally available materials that are readily available to implement cerebral palsy programming and create play materials for children

Pictorial representation of activity training conducted photos @ Dr harriet#.

All participants were given knowledge and guidance on how to use the training guide in relation to the attached training aid. We were also enlightened on the age bracket under consideration by Ubuntu which was 4 years below but still guidance was given that there was another packed program for children between 5 to17 years. Activities geared towards developmental milestones were disseminated. Pretest and posttest were taken and results are yet to be shared by the Ubuntu Team. Tips and resources were shared plus at the end of the training, we perused through what seemed to be working well, challenges that in turn would be used for building plans for monitoring and evaluation.

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook

About Project Reports

Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.

If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can receive an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.

Sign up for updates

Organization Information

Child and Family foundation uganda

Location: kampala - Uganda
Website:
Facebook: Facebook Page
Twitter: @cfuuganda
Project Leader:
Babikako Harriet
kampala , Kampala Uganda
$4,833 raised of $60,000 goal
 
69 donations
$55,167 to go
Donate Now
lock
Donating through GlobalGiving is safe, secure, and easy with many payment options to choose from. View other ways to donate

Child and Family foundation uganda has earned this recognition on GlobalGiving:

Help raise money!

Support this important cause by creating a personalized fundraising page.

Start a Fundraiser

Learn more about GlobalGiving

Teenage Science Students
Vetting +
Due Diligence

Snorkeler
Our
Impact

Woman Holding a Gift Card
Give
Gift Cards

Young Girl with a Bicycle
GlobalGiving
Guarantee

Get incredible stories, promotions, and matching offers in your inbox

WARNING: Javascript is currently disabled or is not available in your browser. GlobalGiving makes extensive use of Javascript and will not function properly with Javascript disabled. Please enable Javascript and refresh this page.