THE
THE
REGINA KIIZA DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE (REKIDI)
PROPOSED
BY
DISHMA INC.
P.O. BOX 8885,
KAMPALA-UGANDA
WWW.SITUATIONHEALTHANALYSIS.BLOGSPOT.COM
SECTION ONE: INTRODUCTION
Background
This project comes at a time concerns of the disabled persons are either ignored or unknown by the local and international community. The real face of the disabled people thus remains as ones living in permanent prison behind family houses –with limited or no care and attention to their health and education needs, without opportunities of development being allocated to them, and without a decent shelter to live in.
WHO (2011) puts the world disability figures at 15%. In Africa people with disability account for an estimated 10% of the general population. They represent 20% of the poor, 80% of working age people with disability are unemployed. School enrollment for those living with disabilities is between 5 to 10 percent (Exodus Guild, 2011).
Article 28 of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities asks States Parties to take steps towards safeguarding and promoting the realization of the right to an adequate standard of living and social protection, including ensuring “access by persons with disabilities and their families living in situations of poverty to assistance from the State with disability-related expenses –including adequate training, counseling, financial assistance and respite care” (UN Enable, 2008).
Despite existing political representation to parliament in Uganda and prominent non-government organizations, no tangibles are visible to benefit disabled persons. The best they can afford to do for themselves is to languish on streets –begging for a living while those –whose families cannot afford to see that happen, simply lock them up in houses as a protection measure.
That, however, has risks of its own; like in case of a fire outbreak, it is not only a sure way of turning disable person victim, but also makes rescue efforts difficult as the home is left completed locked up.
The Problem Statement
Distributors of the original manual wheel chairs did not make prior inquiries about nature of physical disability, injury or infection-causing disability. They distribute wheel chairs –regardless of their incompatible.
This contributes to more co-morbid cases –more deformations or defects than the already existing medical case of disability. The spine-cords and the back bone can get abnormally postured due to incompatibility of wheel-chair with the shape, comfort needs and size of the disabled person.
Care involves lifting the heavy disabled person on and off of the wheel chair at some point, care takers and most family member’s experienced burnt-out syndrome –sometimes leading to rejection and abandonment of the disabled children or persons. That renders them helpless as no one else helps them out to use toilet or bathroom –which increases infection on another hand.
The impoverished family members cannot afford meeting the necessary resources to access special education, to acquire accommodation space enough for rehabilitation exercises and facilities that enhance proper hygiene and sanitation, like appropriate toilet and bath place.
As a result, it also increases the risk of infection related to poor hygiene and/or improper disposal of waste “products,” and above all, they were left to sit stationary, which -with time affects locomotion in the limbs as arms and limbs rigidity ensues.
Justification
It is anticipated that the creation of the multi-purpose wheel chair will not only create a big sigh of relief for families and caretakers, but it would also increase and sustain hope of disabled-persons living a more fulfilling and productive life.
They, for example, would be able to roll of the multi-purpose wheel-chair onto the normal sleeping bed, adjust the back-rest to a rest bed when fatigued and comfortably sleep -as though on the normal bed.
With the three bottom support-seat layers, he or she would be in position to use the top layer for official purposes –as to go to school, make visits, and to socialize or play, while the last layer would have a potty or toilet provision and bathing safety and support seat structured in a way that drains out water as the disabled persons bathes.
The product can be cheaply produced using local resources and donated to rehabilitation projects twice a year. The multi-purpose wheel-chair, also, would help the disabled person pursue are physical developmental activities like washing, helping out in the job, brush his or her teeth, arts and crafts, support socialization, attend school with confidence and with far lessened burden to care-takers.
The multi-purpose design would ease the development of the disabled person –mentally, physical, (able to do basic self-help ventures as going to bed, toilet, bathroom, being able to change clothes, economic (attend to economic endeavors as selling items, crafts making, for career development and the confidence to try and succeed in all ventures of life), and relief caretakers and families from the stress of physically lifting off and one the disabled person from the wheel-chair, and have the disabled person enjoy sustained hope and love from his or her family.
Finally, it is a model that could go on to cover Eastern Uganda and further to help millions of other disabled persons in Uganda and world at large.
Purpose of the Project
To design and manufacture disabled person’s wheel chairs that are characteristic to humans and supportive to human natural growth and development processes as well as rehabilitation efforts for dignified living.
Specific Objectives:
To create hope and sustain it in the lives of the disabled persons so that they can think more positively about the future for self-advancement
To transform disabled persons into healthy, more productive, and responsible members of the global community -socially, politically, economically and spiritually
To prevent accelerated deformities due to wrong wheel chair prescription, lack of qualified consultants and inappropriate wheel chair designs
To ease families and care-takers of stress having to face the burden of lifting disabled persons on and off their wheel-chairs
SECTION TWO: THE TECHNOLOGICAL REVIEW AND ANALYSIS
The New Wheel Chair Design and the New Lease of Disable-person’s Life
The multi-purpose wheel chair would constitute; a back-rest -also adjustable to a resting bed, triple bottom seater -one cushioned for formal use as to visit, go to school; draining seater for bathing and potty shelf seater –for use above toilet or latrines; side-by-side balcony for rolling off the wheel-chair to the bed or to normal chairs; front dining and study table; adjustable legs and foot-rests; tubeless tires. Original technologies of motorized and electric types could be integrated as well as the varied weight and size compatibility wheel-chairs.
The design would have greater considerations as supportive interventions like spacious accommodation, home-based learning, home-based health care, rehabilitation clinic, life-skills training, enable socialization, gardening (and rearing of animals), and adventure –side-by-side –aimed at creating a meaningful lives above mental and physical disabilities.
The current products are specially designed for different tasks like separate one for bathing, separate other for toilet and high mobility for the more incapacitated disabled-person. It would mean the care-giver buying a whole set at an average of $500, which not any one affords -especially our resource-limited friends of the southern hemisphere.
Depending on affordability, there exists the manual and the automated wheel-chairs (Wikipedia, 2009). They are used by people, for whom walking is difficult dues to sickness or injury. They where first introduced in China in the 6th century and later in Europe (Wikipedia, 2009).
Some Existing Wheel-chair Designs Today
1: Manual Wheel-chair $99 -most in use.
2: Mobility scooters
3: Power Wheel-chair
Source: www.wheelchairdepot.com
Wheel-chair are a variety and of varied prices depending on the quality. Also available on the market are accessories depending on functionality. For example; transport chairs, bathroom safety products, transfer chairs, shower wheel-chairs etc.
Fig. 1: Transport Wheel-chairs
Fig. 2: Walking Wheel-chairs
Source: http://bestwheelchairs.com/
Children are counseled before joining others to school wondering how colleagues would react. They find themselves different from the rest, by the fact that they cannot walk. Part of the orientation is to explain to fellow scholars about their disability. It can really be involving to relieve disabled-person and care-takers or families concerned of entrenched depression and agony.
Experience, however, has showed that disabled people go through a lot of confusion –amidst misunderstanding from their family members –and there are no counseling services available for them.
In addition to the fact that families can be impoverished to afford education, medical care, a balanced diet, perception of the important roles of physical exercises, and spacious residencies to facilitate rehabilitating movements; the mental health issues too become the very first obstacle.
And, rehabilitation experts could use personalities like former United States (US) president Franklin Delano Roosevelt as inspirational figure, who in 1945 used a wheel chair, and at the same time remembered as one of the strongest presidents in U.S. history -who contracted polio at 39 years.
Luckily for children the wheel chairs are light, faster and easier to use meant to suit their weight. A child would use his or her wheel chair smoothly; brake -especially for electronic wheel chairs (Kidshealth, 2009).
Power wheel-chair has wheel-chair designed for comfort, easy mobility and, even for disabled persons with active lifestyles -more so with a taste for sports. There also exists a specialized department for those –who want specialized designs and firms can work around one's requirement in order to bring out the best results (Wheelchairspower, 2009).
The scooter store helps thousands of people regain their mobility and independence at no cost with their guaranteed freedom program (The scooter store, 2009). Some organizations are helping transform lives through the gift of mobility to the disabled poor in the developing countries.
Uganda is one of the beneficiaries. It partners with a vast network of humanitarian, faith-based and government organizations –sending wheel chairs to hundreds of thousands of disabled people providing not only the gift of mobility; but of dignity, independence and hope (Freewheelchairmission, 2009).
The Wheel-chair Foundation is a non-profit organization leading an international effort to create awareness of the needs and abilities of people with physical disabilities: to promote the joy of giving, create global friendship, and to deliver a wheel-chair to every child, teen and adult in the world –who needs one, but cannot afford one. Indeed, to the vulnerable community as disabled people, the Wheel-chair Foundation delivers Hope, Mobility and Independence (Wheel Chair Foundation, 2009).
Selecting a wheel-chair depends on age, disability and abilities. Professionals like occupational therapists and physicians make some of the initial decisions of the selection process (Abledata.com, 2009).
Experts argue that environment and health are intertwined. “Environment (s) can determine the level of your health…” –Simon Nantamu (PhD), Global Health, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland.
Current Wheelchair Components
Flames -are made out of a variety of materials including stainless steel, aircraft aluminum, titanium, chrome alloys and other light weight composite materials. Materials used determine wheel chair strength and capacity.
Seating systems -are removable and frequently separated from the wheel-chair. Include the sitting posture support systems. Sitting must allow the person to fit.
Upholstery must be rugged enough to withstand daily use and a variety of weather conditions. A number of materials are currently available, including nylon, velour, polyester, vinyl, and leather. They and flames come in variety of colors.
Brakes – are usually applied manually when braking. They can be mounted at different heights depending on the users needs. Powered chairs have electro-mechanical or dynamic brakes.
Wheels and tires -They are of a variety of types and styles. Most wheel chair use a four wheel system –compromised of two larger wheels in the back and smaller casters in the front. They are generally aluminum and molded composites.
The most common rear wheel is 24 inches in diameter, but all other wheel sizes are available. There are also the over-sized wheel tires, offload tires, steel-reinforced, semi-pneumatic tires -a combination of solid rubber and air-filled tubing.
Foot-rests -Incorporated on the rigid flame chair offer a range of options -fixed, detached, swing-away, or elevating legrests, or legrests featuring a combination of these elements.
Arm-rests
Armrests are generally available in full- and desk-length styles, and may be detachable, height-adjustable, flip-up, have a combination of features, or be fixed. Some chairs, especially lightweight or sports models are designed to be used without armrests.
Controls for powered chairs and scooters -regulate speed and direction. However, most manufacturers offer customized control options to accommodate the varied abilities of the user. Many chairs also have programmable control features which allow the user or a dealer to adjust or set the chair's speed and control limits as the user's abilities change.
There are also manufacturers, who do not make wheel-chairs, but who offer specialized control systems for powered wheelchairs –including voice-activated controls. When purchasing controls and switches from a source, other than the chair's manufacturer, it is essential to determine that the selected control is compatible with the chair.
Drive system for powered chairs and scooters -the drive system refers to the means by which power is delivered to the chair's wheels. Standard drive systems include; gear drive, direct drive, and belt drive. The type of drive system affects the power available to propel the chair and the amount and type of maintenance the chair requires.
Batteries for powered chairs and scooters -Batteries are a determining factor in the range and power of a powered chair. The larger the chair's batteries, the greater the power and the longer the chair's duration-in-use between time it is charged. Many chairs require two re-chargeable 12-volt batteries.
Most wheel-chairs utilize U1, group 22 or 24 batteries, although other batteries are also used. More manufacturers are designing chairs around the group 24 battery because it affords a longer range. The type of battery required is also an important consideration in terms of safety, maintenance, and transport.
Powered chairs may utilize lead acid, gel cell, or sealed wet batteries. Gel cell batteries require the least maintenance and have less danger of leaking than do the other battery types. Gel cell batteries are also required by a number of airlines when transporting powered chairs.
Existing Resources to Exploit
There exist permanent structures close to health centers that can be accessed through a purchase bargain to provide rehabilitation and learning space, gardening and animal rearing space (for food security), home-based care, and access to medical services and for the disabled persons.
There are identifiably abundant underutilized professional services to assist in training (in life skills like handicrafts) and rehabilitation needs of the disabled person.
SECTION THREE: PROPOSED DESIGN
Multi-purpose Wheel-chair Constituents
A single wheel-chair
Either automated or manual –with several distinct functions put together for detailed or all-round well-functioning of the disabled person. This would help prevent extreme cormobid cases due to lesser mobility, psychological depression and discomfort.
Cushioned arms-rests/adjustable balcony
They would be shaped out to steel and aluminum to act as safety accessories as well as small emergency doors. The arms-rests will be cushioned on either side for sudden napping anytime the disabled-persons feel fit.
Adjustable back-rest
This, as has been the case could act as back-support component of the wheel-chair. But on the most important note, would be its side-by-side purpose of easily having it adjusted to a resting bed –when the disabled-person finds it easiest to provide for it, more than having to shift to a normal bed. They could as well be called temporary beds for disabled-persons. It shall have two stands to be pulled out for use when bed option is made.
The three bottom seat plates
They would be set to allow swift pulling forward and pushing of particular seat plates in use and out of use, respectfully.
The first one, above the rest, would be a comfortable, well cushioned seat (of any color design). It would be an official seat for social occasions -including education.
The second one, only second to the first cushioned seat, would be one adjustable to work as a bathroom accessory plate, made on stainless steel and slightly inclined to allow water from the showers to drain out.
The last seat plate to mention would be that below the first two. It would work as toilet accessory -allowing the disabled person to easily activate adjacent to the toilet seat or hole.
And all shall be adjustable to the ground and back to the recommended height. Adjusting it to the ground will be in an effort to let the disabled-person down to the floor, while adjusting it up-wards will be to let disabled-person climb up for ultimate use.
Front wheel-chair table
This would works as a dining table for the disabled person, a school desk and a protective balcony against injury. The first 5 centimeters of it, too, shall be cushioned for napping purposes.
This, like other wheel-chairs, would be used to support feet when disabled person is seated. However, for the purposes of the multi-purpose wheel-chair, the foot-rests would be held in-between by a tough, thick letter material, along with which the foot-rests could be adjusted by 180 degrees to allow legs to stretch out straight, and for comfortable sleeping or resting using a bed provision on the multi-purpose wheel-chair. This, too, would have stands to support leather material and the bars -all purposed for holding legs during sleeping or resting time.
Tyres
Strong rubber tires could do, but for the multi-purpose wheel-chair, tubeless would be most appropriate.
Testing the wheel-chair
At completion of assembling the wheel-chair would be put to road-test with disabled persons on trial –which would be preceded with numerous other tests by renowned medical firms to test further the multi-purpose wheel-chair efficacy and effectiveness.
It would be at the end of that that results could be compiled and report readied for publication, and product -for marketing and use. To note, also, is that the multi-purpose wheel-chair could suit one -who is either opting for a motorized wheel-chair or manual.
Multi-purpose Home Environment –to act as a rehabilitation center, life skills training center, home-based care center and, at some point, be open to organizational roles like advocacy, research and development –regarding disabled persons’ concerns –regionally, nationally and internationally.
Monitoring and Evaluation
Monitoring and evaluations shall be conducted to improve on the products working efficiency annually –to the disabled person's comfort and ease to use –as well as the health developments in their lives.
SECTION FOUR:
CHALLENGES, CONCLUSIONS AND WAY FORWARD
This section details the challenges, conclusions and way forward for the Regina Kiiza proposal, and are indicated below:
Challenges to Overcome
It is not yet known where raw material, as steel, aluminum and leather could be obtained, lack of the right team to take on the project to its end, and above all; considerable amount of money will be needed to oversee the implementation of the project, yet no funding institution has been identified to cater for the emerging financial challenges.
Conclusion and Way Forward
A lot of existing wheel-chair technologies would help fastens the development of the multi-purpose wheel-chair. Much of the old wheel-chair components not indicated here could be used as well, for example, the brakes and others -which obviously must constitute the new design.
The multi-purpose wheel-chair design would be presented hand-in-hand with an environment-fit design for the disabled-persons, supportive community linkages –as to and from policy makers, or have the design integrated into the usual environment systems of social interaction.
Such supportive systemic elements eventually enables disabled person to attain basic education, to have decent housing, to have love and respect, to access medical care, to get applied life skills training, attend rehabilitation workouts, and access to new technological advancements that improve their lives further. Such is a model other helpless physically or mentally handicapped children can benefit from as the project grows.
There are possibilities of striking partnership with existing research agencies that could be honest enough to protect the copyright reserved only for Dishma Inc., as well as making use of the local artisan community in Katwe, Uganda.
And, it is all hopes, through prayer that the financial challenges will be overcome. We could see friends and well-wishers rise up to that occasion, while also some research has to be made on potential sources of cheap raw materials stated above for swift project implementation.
Showing posts with label Disabled. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Disabled. Show all posts
Monday, August 22, 2011
Sunday, January 27, 2008
Making the World Better Place for Everyone: Doing So is a Community Resposibility. Help the Mentally and Physically Handicapped...
THE
REGINA
FOUNDATION
FOR
THE PHYSICALLY AND MENTALLY HANDICAPPED (RFPMH)
CONTACT PERSON: DAISY NAMULEMO (OF THE CONCERNED PARENTS)
EMAIL: namulemod@yahoo.com
P.O. BOX 1208, JINJA-UGANDA
PHONE: +256-78-8-015399 (Especially after 21.00 pm
Background
Like many unlucky children who do not choose to be mentally or physically handicapped -Regina Kiiza was born health, but later experienced long term complications -leading to physical and mental strains. She has spent her whole life under medication and half of it hospitalized -with multiple health complications that developed and besieged her.
But currently, she is under home care arrangement. This, though, has denied her chance to go to school, adventure about her immediate family, help and manage herself (to bath, wash or move to the showers) and increased burden to care takers/care givers -who have to supervise her and at the same time fend for a living.
Loneliness and lack of adequate physical exercises, therefore, turned out to be a torture -which aggravated already affected body. It would be hard for someone to imagine as much as look at. And for some people, who care, their expertise is rendered useless, without other supportive resources to foot rehabilitation and health supervision budget. Instead, find raising voices in solidarity with affected persons like Regina, a bigger alternative.
Such voices are meant to awaken communities both local and international in the face of an alarming state of affairs -where the mentally and physically handicapped (MPH) are not only beset by nature but sidelines and forgotten by communities -with whom they are both charged with responsibility to look after God's creation (Genesis 1:20-23). MPHs too were created for good just as all beings are good in the face of God.
The foundation, therefore, wishes to use Regina's case and/or experience to reach out to all children and adults caged for being mentally or physically handicapped -by way of supporting them and helping them sustain good health, be productive and responsible citizens, as well as generate and sustain hope to achieve the best in their lives.
Introduction
During the Nazi rule, the physically and mentally handicapped weree set aside for mercy killing. In 1939, Hitler himself passed a degree requiring physicians to carry out mercy killing on patients considered incurable. Today, the new Nazi are the neglectful of the vulnerable persons or suffocate progress of human life.
Moving around rural and slum areas, the physically and mentally handicapped are tied up on ropes for fear of being raped or stoned to death, kept in the backyard -for being unpresentable and frightening to visitors, or treated like convicted prisoners -whose activity would be limited to receiving food.
But they are human beings and entitled to dignifying treatment. They, for example, deserve access and/or right to medical attention, to learning opportunities, to movement (play and exercise), to employment, to appropriate technology (that considers their vulnerability), to recreational facilities right to a healthy environment and to participate in development of their countries.
In helping integrate them into society different technological designs would be developed to help integrate handicapped persons with learning to be self-responsibility, self-sufficient and at some stage; be socially responsible citizens.
Here life skills -involvement self-understanding, dealing with stigma, self-management training, training in social skills, communication, negotiation, goal setting, health science basics and livelihood issues.
They could indeed have a life to live and a passion for life, though the community in which they live, must care and support them as fundamental contribution. We could all feel obliged to help these people through not just giving, but also developing them to self-sufficiency.
Unfortunately, a big section lives in the most poor category -both financially and intellectually. Some communities, besides, hardly find a dollar a day to live on, they could luck both hope and plan for the vulnerable dependents as well. Instead, they would be locked up in the backyard as “useless.”
For poor families, they would not have necessary care from their care-givers -as out and about they would be moving and working in farm lands or providing casual to make a living for themselves.
But also, there is a category of the elderly -who at the same time acting as care-givers. There could be sadness in such a home as they are both vulnerable. At worst the physically handicapped could need lifting up and down -which adds on the misery. It would be at this point that community support is key.
There must be not only a policy that protect and support emancipation of the vulnerable people as well as social and economic structures that put them (vulnerable people) into transformation processes.
That could be show of love, care and support by communities, supporting developmental paths of the vulnerable through institutional and social structural accommodation. We would need also to be appreciative of them as people we have to live and develop with.
Problem
Vulnerable people (the physically and mentally handicapped -MPH) are so often neglected first by their families and later communities. They are considered useless to society and their potential is hardly explored. So they are made, and remain destitutes within their own communities -as though permanent sentence to misery and subsequent extinction.
Even the few local non-government organizations, whose charter would be to emancipate them, hardly do so either because they lack capacity or just part of the neglectful society in as far as supporting the mentally and physically handicapped is concerned.
Problem
Vulnerable people (the physically and mentally handicapped -MPH) are so often neglected first by their families and later communities. They are considered useless to society and their potential is hardly explored. So they are made, and remain destitutes within their own communities -as though permanent sentence to misery and subsequent extinction. Even the few local organisations, whose charter would be to emancipate them, hardly do so either because they lack capacity or just part of the neglectful society.
Justification
The vulnerable people have faced a cruel face of the community through neglect and absence of interventional mechanism to make them productive and be able to contribute to the development of their communities. Yet the real community sense would be to identify vulnerable people as credible to society, whose voices must be heard and equally have access to developmental opportunities.
Goal
Provide a more meaningful and dignifying treatment to the vulnerable groups as people who deserve a good life to live, demonstrate productivity sense and participate in community development -with community sense of support and recognition.
Objectives
To raise voices of the MPH
To advocate for environmental designs that fit the MPH e.g. Toilets, building steps and accessibility, sports and games facilities, schooling structural erection and medical technological equipment's
To ensure the physically and mentally handicapped access opportunities for self-development e.g. Skills formation, formal education, employment and recreation
To reduce self and community stigma
To fight abuses against the vulnerable groups e.g. Rape and neglect
To fight HIV/AIDS amongst the MPH
To promote the fight against poverty in families with the MPH
To promote research in medical technologies that would help improve the normal functioning and performance of the MPH
Activities
Journaling and radio or television talk shows
Petitioning governments and international bodies about plight of the MPH
Career guidance and counseling for MPH
Rehabilitation or restoration of the productive sense and performance of the MPH
Seeks grants for families of MPH to start income generating projects
Offer skills in self-management, communication, social, assertive, life-planning and livelihood
Research and Reporting
Fundraising and projects support
Projected Out-comes
Community acknowledgment of the plight of the MPH
Reduced self and community stigma
Productivity and resourcefulness
Their employability
Respect and dignifying treatment from family and community members
Improved (normal) functioning and wellbeings of MPH
Participation in community initiatives/activities for development by MPH
Happiness and joy on the their faces
Community engagement in supporting of their health and livelihood development
Portrayal of love for the MPH
MPH increased and sustained hope for the future
Target Group
Children and the youthful physically and mentally handicapped
The elderly
Partner Institutions
Government ministries for welfare, children and youth, health and the disabled
Local and international organizations dealing in related services
Community members
Donor agencies and individuals
Monitoring and Evaluation
The programme intends to run in segmented time frame meant to review its impact -and this would be a period of three years -with mini-impact assessments (monthly) and final assessment, yearly. The indicators of success would be;
No more damping for the physically and mentally handicapped at home like prisoners
Increased number of participants in vocation and rehabilitation centers
Increased members subscribing to RFPMH
More positive yet supportive comments received from communities as evidence of impact
Reduced guardian burden for management of vulnerable people
More disabled (s) seen moving themselves in wheels or other accessories and in developmental activities or recreation.
Participation of the disableds in family and community events
Strength
Increasing number of psychologically and links that would reinforce rehabilitation needs of the physically and mentally handicapped.
Challenges
Positive impacts in human behaviour are not easy to measure, and in most cases, take long to be noticed. However, evidence of positive community response to the receipt
of RFPMH services shall be of much interest to the monitoring and evaluation team.
Management
Patron
Executive Director
Programme Managers
(out-reach), (health and care), (rehabilitation and vocation studies), (advocacy, fundraising and sponsorships), (partnership relations and development), (client welfare), (recreation and co-curricular needs), (accounting and auditing)
Parents and Care-taker Assembly
Secretary
Medical team
Interns
And Volunteer Team
Sources of Funding
Fundraising (s)
Friends donations and gifts
RFPMH projects funds and assets
Budget
Item
Quantity
Cost ($)
Total Costs ($)
Office rent and related bills
400 per month
200
Scholastic Materials
10 per month
10
Office Furniture
400 x 1
400
Office Stationery
10 per month
10
Office Computer and Internet Facility
100 x 10 PCs &Installation 20 x 1
1020
Games and Sports/ Recreation Facilities
800 x 1
800
Consultancies on (mental health and physical health and legal)
400 per month
400
Public Awareness
400 per month
400
Research, Publications and Circulation
800 per month
400
Products Exhibition
400 per month
400
Personnel
5,000 per month
5000
Travel
1,000 x 1 van
1000
Rehabilitation, Recreation and Health Center
10,000 x 1
10000
Food and Nutrition
200 per month
200
RFPMH Projects Fund
100 per month
100
Family Project Support Grants (families of MPH)
20 per month
20
Simultaneous
5,000 per month
5000
Total Costs ($)
25320
Raising the Voice
Call to donate or to make different forms of contributions +256-71-2-270614 or send your tokens and gifts to Account Number: 5800857181 -Barkley's Bank-Uganda or Crane Bank on Account Number 0140001085700.
OR Accept to volunteer by helping to bring joy and hope to MPH and make the World a better place for them.
OR Accept to Sponsor Child for Special Needs Training and Self-Management
OR accept to fundraise towards construction of rehabilitation and health center
You can also send statement of encouragement to Daisy and Regina and indeed pay a visit -in all to bring hope as well as meaning of life to children like Regina Kizza.
Thank you and God Bless You,
Jacob Waiswa
Project Promoter
+256774336277
P.O. BOX 8885,
KAMPALA-UGANDA
waiswajacobo@yahoo.co.uk
Below is Regina at her best moments, which is when she receives visitors. Regina Kizza welcomes you all to visit her. She is being cared for by Daisy Namulemo.
REGINA
FOUNDATION
FOR
THE PHYSICALLY AND MENTALLY HANDICAPPED (RFPMH)
CONTACT PERSON: DAISY NAMULEMO (OF THE CONCERNED PARENTS)
EMAIL: namulemod@yahoo.com
P.O. BOX 1208, JINJA-UGANDA
PHONE: +256-78-8-015399 (Especially after 21.00 pm
Background
Like many unlucky children who do not choose to be mentally or physically handicapped -Regina Kiiza was born health, but later experienced long term complications -leading to physical and mental strains. She has spent her whole life under medication and half of it hospitalized -with multiple health complications that developed and besieged her.
But currently, she is under home care arrangement. This, though, has denied her chance to go to school, adventure about her immediate family, help and manage herself (to bath, wash or move to the showers) and increased burden to care takers/care givers -who have to supervise her and at the same time fend for a living.
Loneliness and lack of adequate physical exercises, therefore, turned out to be a torture -which aggravated already affected body. It would be hard for someone to imagine as much as look at. And for some people, who care, their expertise is rendered useless, without other supportive resources to foot rehabilitation and health supervision budget. Instead, find raising voices in solidarity with affected persons like Regina, a bigger alternative.
Such voices are meant to awaken communities both local and international in the face of an alarming state of affairs -where the mentally and physically handicapped (MPH) are not only beset by nature but sidelines and forgotten by communities -with whom they are both charged with responsibility to look after God's creation (Genesis 1:20-23). MPHs too were created for good just as all beings are good in the face of God.
The foundation, therefore, wishes to use Regina's case and/or experience to reach out to all children and adults caged for being mentally or physically handicapped -by way of supporting them and helping them sustain good health, be productive and responsible citizens, as well as generate and sustain hope to achieve the best in their lives.
Introduction
During the Nazi rule, the physically and mentally handicapped weree set aside for mercy killing. In 1939, Hitler himself passed a degree requiring physicians to carry out mercy killing on patients considered incurable. Today, the new Nazi are the neglectful of the vulnerable persons or suffocate progress of human life.
Moving around rural and slum areas, the physically and mentally handicapped are tied up on ropes for fear of being raped or stoned to death, kept in the backyard -for being unpresentable and frightening to visitors, or treated like convicted prisoners -whose activity would be limited to receiving food.
But they are human beings and entitled to dignifying treatment. They, for example, deserve access and/or right to medical attention, to learning opportunities, to movement (play and exercise), to employment, to appropriate technology (that considers their vulnerability), to recreational facilities right to a healthy environment and to participate in development of their countries.
In helping integrate them into society different technological designs would be developed to help integrate handicapped persons with learning to be self-responsibility, self-sufficient and at some stage; be socially responsible citizens.
Here life skills -involvement self-understanding, dealing with stigma, self-management training, training in social skills, communication, negotiation, goal setting, health science basics and livelihood issues.
They could indeed have a life to live and a passion for life, though the community in which they live, must care and support them as fundamental contribution. We could all feel obliged to help these people through not just giving, but also developing them to self-sufficiency.
Unfortunately, a big section lives in the most poor category -both financially and intellectually. Some communities, besides, hardly find a dollar a day to live on, they could luck both hope and plan for the vulnerable dependents as well. Instead, they would be locked up in the backyard as “useless.”
For poor families, they would not have necessary care from their care-givers -as out and about they would be moving and working in farm lands or providing casual to make a living for themselves.
But also, there is a category of the elderly -who at the same time acting as care-givers. There could be sadness in such a home as they are both vulnerable. At worst the physically handicapped could need lifting up and down -which adds on the misery. It would be at this point that community support is key.
There must be not only a policy that protect and support emancipation of the vulnerable people as well as social and economic structures that put them (vulnerable people) into transformation processes.
That could be show of love, care and support by communities, supporting developmental paths of the vulnerable through institutional and social structural accommodation. We would need also to be appreciative of them as people we have to live and develop with.
Problem
Vulnerable people (the physically and mentally handicapped -MPH) are so often neglected first by their families and later communities. They are considered useless to society and their potential is hardly explored. So they are made, and remain destitutes within their own communities -as though permanent sentence to misery and subsequent extinction.
Even the few local non-government organizations, whose charter would be to emancipate them, hardly do so either because they lack capacity or just part of the neglectful society in as far as supporting the mentally and physically handicapped is concerned.
Problem
Vulnerable people (the physically and mentally handicapped -MPH) are so often neglected first by their families and later communities. They are considered useless to society and their potential is hardly explored. So they are made, and remain destitutes within their own communities -as though permanent sentence to misery and subsequent extinction. Even the few local organisations, whose charter would be to emancipate them, hardly do so either because they lack capacity or just part of the neglectful society.
Justification
The vulnerable people have faced a cruel face of the community through neglect and absence of interventional mechanism to make them productive and be able to contribute to the development of their communities. Yet the real community sense would be to identify vulnerable people as credible to society, whose voices must be heard and equally have access to developmental opportunities.
Goal
Provide a more meaningful and dignifying treatment to the vulnerable groups as people who deserve a good life to live, demonstrate productivity sense and participate in community development -with community sense of support and recognition.
Objectives
To raise voices of the MPH
To advocate for environmental designs that fit the MPH e.g. Toilets, building steps and accessibility, sports and games facilities, schooling structural erection and medical technological equipment's
To ensure the physically and mentally handicapped access opportunities for self-development e.g. Skills formation, formal education, employment and recreation
To reduce self and community stigma
To fight abuses against the vulnerable groups e.g. Rape and neglect
To fight HIV/AIDS amongst the MPH
To promote the fight against poverty in families with the MPH
To promote research in medical technologies that would help improve the normal functioning and performance of the MPH
Activities
Journaling and radio or television talk shows
Petitioning governments and international bodies about plight of the MPH
Career guidance and counseling for MPH
Rehabilitation or restoration of the productive sense and performance of the MPH
Seeks grants for families of MPH to start income generating projects
Offer skills in self-management, communication, social, assertive, life-planning and livelihood
Research and Reporting
Fundraising and projects support
Projected Out-comes
Community acknowledgment of the plight of the MPH
Reduced self and community stigma
Productivity and resourcefulness
Their employability
Respect and dignifying treatment from family and community members
Improved (normal) functioning and wellbeings of MPH
Participation in community initiatives/activities for development by MPH
Happiness and joy on the their faces
Community engagement in supporting of their health and livelihood development
Portrayal of love for the MPH
MPH increased and sustained hope for the future
Target Group
Children and the youthful physically and mentally handicapped
The elderly
Partner Institutions
Government ministries for welfare, children and youth, health and the disabled
Local and international organizations dealing in related services
Community members
Donor agencies and individuals
Monitoring and Evaluation
The programme intends to run in segmented time frame meant to review its impact -and this would be a period of three years -with mini-impact assessments (monthly) and final assessment, yearly. The indicators of success would be;
No more damping for the physically and mentally handicapped at home like prisoners
Increased number of participants in vocation and rehabilitation centers
Increased members subscribing to RFPMH
More positive yet supportive comments received from communities as evidence of impact
Reduced guardian burden for management of vulnerable people
More disabled (s) seen moving themselves in wheels or other accessories and in developmental activities or recreation.
Participation of the disableds in family and community events
Strength
Increasing number of psychologically and links that would reinforce rehabilitation needs of the physically and mentally handicapped.
Challenges
Positive impacts in human behaviour are not easy to measure, and in most cases, take long to be noticed. However, evidence of positive community response to the receipt
of RFPMH services shall be of much interest to the monitoring and evaluation team.
Management
Patron
Executive Director
Programme Managers
(out-reach), (health and care), (rehabilitation and vocation studies), (advocacy, fundraising and sponsorships), (partnership relations and development), (client welfare), (recreation and co-curricular needs), (accounting and auditing)
Parents and Care-taker Assembly
Secretary
Medical team
Interns
And Volunteer Team
Sources of Funding
Fundraising (s)
Friends donations and gifts
RFPMH projects funds and assets
Budget
Item
Quantity
Cost ($)
Total Costs ($)
Office rent and related bills
400 per month
200
Scholastic Materials
10 per month
10
Office Furniture
400 x 1
400
Office Stationery
10 per month
10
Office Computer and Internet Facility
100 x 10 PCs &Installation 20 x 1
1020
Games and Sports/ Recreation Facilities
800 x 1
800
Consultancies on (mental health and physical health and legal)
400 per month
400
Public Awareness
400 per month
400
Research, Publications and Circulation
800 per month
400
Products Exhibition
400 per month
400
Personnel
5,000 per month
5000
Travel
1,000 x 1 van
1000
Rehabilitation, Recreation and Health Center
10,000 x 1
10000
Food and Nutrition
200 per month
200
RFPMH Projects Fund
100 per month
100
Family Project Support Grants (families of MPH)
20 per month
20
Simultaneous
5,000 per month
5000
Total Costs ($)
25320
Raising the Voice
Call to donate or to make different forms of contributions +256-71-2-270614 or send your tokens and gifts to Account Number: 5800857181 -Barkley's Bank-Uganda or Crane Bank on Account Number 0140001085700.
OR Accept to volunteer by helping to bring joy and hope to MPH and make the World a better place for them.
OR Accept to Sponsor Child for Special Needs Training and Self-Management
OR accept to fundraise towards construction of rehabilitation and health center
You can also send statement of encouragement to Daisy and Regina and indeed pay a visit -in all to bring hope as well as meaning of life to children like Regina Kizza.
Thank you and God Bless You,
Jacob Waiswa
Project Promoter
+256774336277
P.O. BOX 8885,
KAMPALA-UGANDA
waiswajacobo@yahoo.co.uk
Below is Regina at her best moments, which is when she receives visitors. Regina Kizza welcomes you all to visit her. She is being cared for by Daisy Namulemo.
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