Ms Deborah Mangortey,
Mother of a child with Down syndrome, has called on the government to establish
a free health care policy for children with complex health needs for the first
five years of their lives.
She said a free health care policy will ensure that such
children get all the necessary assessments and therapy recommendations done and
help the children get early intervention services
“Parents of children with complex health needs and
disabilities are already burdened by the huge financial commitments that comes
along with nurturing them, the system also puts stumbling blocks in the way of
parents,” she said
Ms Mangortey made the call at the Special Needs Parenting
Summit, a forum that brought together parents of children with Special Needs to
dialogue on how they can make inputs into national policies.
She also advised parents to avail themselves for research
purposes and share their stories publicly since that goes a long way to make
systemic changes
“Be interested in research and data collection, share your
stories and make yourselves visible,” Ms Mangortey said, adding that disability
was part of life and there was the need for parents of children with
disabilities to make themselves visible.
The Special Needs Parenting Summit aimed at amplifying the
voice of parents of children with Special Needs in the formulation of policies
to make life a bit easier for themselves.
Mrs Serwaa Quaynor, Mother of a man with Autism, Mrs Mary
Kuffuor, Mother of a teenager with Autism, Mrs Justina Yiadom Boakye, Mother of
a child with Osteogenesis Imperfecta, Mrs Lydia Bedwei, Mother of a woman with
cerebral palsy and Madam Agnes Teiko Nyemi-Tei, Mother of a girl with Down
Syndrome, shared their success stories and called for unity and collaboration
among parents to enable them make the needed impact in policy decisions
Madam Alice Appiah, Chairperson of the Gender Committee of
the Ghana Federation of Disability Organizations (GFD) guest Speaker for the occasion
encouraged the mothers saying “some problems create opportunities for us”
She used the opportunity to educate parents of children with
disabilities on the role of the GFD
Mrs Hannah Awadzi, Founder and Executive Director of the
Special Mothers Project, said following the summit, a communique will be sent
to the relevant Ministries, Departments and Agencies to inform their policy
formulation on children with Special Needs.
The Special Mothers Project provides an online platform for
parents of children with Special Needs to share ideas and experiences, network
and engage in peer counselling
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