Some parents of children with cerebral palsy has expressed
concern about the level of stigmatization in some hospitals when handling
children with special needs
Some of the parents said that stigmatization of children
with special needs especially cerebral palsy starts right at the hospitals with
the kind of attitudes and behaviors some health care professionals show towards
the children
Mrs Alberta Hammond a mother of a child with cerebral palsy,
who shared her experiences said: “all my humiliating and very painful
encounters were at the hospital”
She asked: “why do some nurses and matrons insist on
weighing my severely underweight child by taking off his clothes and placing
him in a white bowl with his legs out in front all others, why can’t our
folders have different features either by colour or by size to tell health
professionals who we are and to get some level of extra care?”
Mrs Hammond said hospitals especially the public ones have
really hostile environment and much more hostile to a parent of a child with
cerebral palsy, explaining that “I do not always have someone going with me to
the hospital and it is even very difficult to use the washrooms in the hospital
even when I have the urge”
The parents shared their experiences with Dr Abena Tannor, a
physical rehabilitation specialist at the Komfo Anokye Hospital prior to a
training programme she is organizing for nurses on providing healthcare for
children and adolescents with special needs
Mr Solomon Acquah, a father of a child with cerebral palsy
said nurses and health care professionals should exercise some patience when
dealing with parents of children of cerebral palsy
“Some of the nurses behave as if you the parents are the
cause of the child frequent visit to the hospital when you go to the hospital frequently
with seizures or infections, it makes some parents hesitate in taking their
children to the hospital anytime they are sick.
Madam Olaide Babalola, a mother of a child with cerebral
palsy also said health professionals usually generalize the issues that affects
children with cerebral palsy, they should know that no two children with
cerebral palsy are the same. They should treat each case as unique and special.
She said health professionals should also share information
on the children’s diagnoses at a very early stage even if they are unsure,
saying, “Once there is a high suspicion of something not right, parents should
be engaged and counseled for early intervention purposes
Mrs Irene Livingstine Acquah, a Carer of a child with
cerebral palsy said: “We stopped going to a particular government hospital
because of the comments and sometimes the disrespect some health professionals
showed towards us.
Mrs Hannah Awadzi, a mother of a child with cerebral palsy
and Founder of the Special Mothers Project, an advocacy and awareness creation
programme on cerebral palsy issues said, nurses and health care professional
should not project their religious beliefs on parents of children with special
needs.
She said: “Some of them make you feel like, you did not pray
enough that is why you have a child with special needs, some sympathy comments
are better not made,”
Madam Emelia Gynekel Bawa, a mother of a child with cerebral
palsy, called for continuous advocacy on cerebral palsy issues, saying, “I
think our noise is getting somewhere, last week my boy was admitted and I marveled
at the way the health workers took keen interest in him, the nurse and the
doctor was super nice to us. I was very
impressed.
Dr Abena Tannor expressed her gratitude for the concerns
raise and said all the issues raised will be factored into her training
programmes for health care professionals.
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