Accra, Nov. 26, - Mr Kenneth
Nangai, a Ugandan Physiotherapist, has advocated that parents of children with
Cerebral Palsy (CP) must lead in the management of the disorder.
He said the therapy was no longer
straight jacketed and should be fused into the daily routine of the child to
ensure maximum results.
“The practice where parents took
their children with cerebral palsy to the hospital for therapy to be done for
them no longer works, it does not take into consideration the parents
well-being, we should look at new ways of rehabilitating these children apart
from taking them to the hospital,” he said.
Mr Nangai is in Ghana as part of
a programme dubbed; “Support Tools Enabling Parents,” that aims at improving
the functionality and quality of life of children with CP through improved
assessments and goal setting.
The project is funded by Liliane
Foundation, a Dutch organisation that supports children and youngsters with
disabilities who live in poverty, to help them develop and use their talents
and contribute to giving them quality lives.
Mr Nangai, who is being hosted by
the Special Mothers Project, an advocacy and awareness creation programme on
CP, has interacted with more than 40 parents and caregivers of children with
cerebral palsy while advising them on what is practically possible to do with
their children.
At a meeting with the parents of
the Special Mothers Group, he said usually families raising children with CP
bore the biggest challenge of addressing the day to day needs of the child such
as feeding, toilet training and general functional abilities.
Parents must, therefore, be
empowered to work effectively to rehabilitate their children with CP, he said.
“We should stop referring to children with
cerebral palsy as being sick or patients, they are not sick, they are only
limited in their functional abilities because of their condition and parents
must be supported to play their role of improving their functionalities,” Mr
Nangai said.
Mrs Hannah Awadzi, the Executive
Director of the Special Mothers Project, said the programme served as a
platform to link families raising children with CP to limited services.
“We try to help families through
our advocacy programmes and we have facilitated the training of some mothers in
various enterprises to enhance their lives,” she said.
GNA

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