Ghana will join the rest of the world to celebrate World
Cerebral Palsy day on the 6th of October this year.
This year’s celebration is being coordinated by a group of nongovernmental
organizations who have come together to form the Cerebral Palsy network, a
network that will champion cerebral palsy issues in Ghana.
The organizations involved are the Special Mothers Project,
an advocacy and awareness creation programme on cerebral Palsy, SWEB
Foundation, an NGO working with persons with disabilities, Sharecare Ghana, an
association for people with autoimmune diseases, Multikids Foundation, an NGO
championing inclusion, CP Awareness Ghana, The Presbyterian Health Services –
Inclusive Child Development programme and some individuals committed to the
cause of persons with disabilities in Ghana.
World Cerebral Palsy Day is a movement of people with
cerebral palsy (CP) and their families, and the organisations that support
them, in more than 60 countries.
Its vision is to ensure that children and adults with CP
have the same rights, access and opportunities as anyone else in our society.
Robyn Cummins World CP Day Manager explains: “Cerebral palsy
is the most common physical disability in childhood and is also one of the
least understood. There are over 17 million people living with CP and 350
million family, friends and supporters who care about them.”
World Cerebral Palsy Day is celebrated on the 6th
of October every year.
In Ghana the day will be commemorated with a public forum to
talk about cerebral palsy and the need for policies that enhance the lives of
persons living with cerebral palsy.
The celebration is on the theme: “We Move together: Inclusion
Now”
Government officials, members of parliament, policy makers
and other dignitaries will be present to have firsthand information and
interaction with children and adults living with cerebral palsy.
An inspirational book titled “The Unexpected “that
chronicles a mother’s journey of a child
with cerebral palsy and how she has risen above that to inspire others will
also be launched.
Earlier in the day, flyers with information on cerebral
palsy will be distributed to commuters using the main Okponglo road in Accra.
Ms. Jedidiah Abanga, Coordinator of the Inclusive Child
Development Programme of the Presbyterian Health Services said the CP Network
in Ghana has designated October as the Cerebral Palsy awareness month and urged
members of the network to share related information on social media throughout
the month
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