OAfrica, a not for profit, child welfare organisation is calling on philanthropists to support them access therapy for people in their care.
The organisation currently has 10
adults with various disabilities in an assisted living facility who need
various therapies and rehabilitation services to keep them going.
Ms Jacinta Attakorah, a social worker
with the organisation told the Special Mothers Project that sourcing funding
has been very difficult after the COVID -19 pandemic.
She explained that the people in their
care were between the ages of 19 and 26 and lived with various kinds of
disability including autism, cerebral palsy psychosis and other disabilities.
OAfrica currently employers foster parents
who lives with the persons in their care and take them through various daily
living skills as well as enrolling them in various vocations to make them
productive citizens and enable them to earn an income by themselves.
Ms Attakorah said: “we need physiotherapists,
occupational therapists, speech therapists, special educationists and
counsellors to support the work we do.”
OAfrica has established the Foster Family
Care (FFC) programme where children abandoned by their families due to poverty
or disability are provided with a safe, stable, and loving environment essential
to their well-being as steps are taken to find more permanent care.
Ms Attakorah said the children are placed
in foster care with a specially trained foster mother who provides for their
daily physical needs and, most importantly, offers love and encouragement that
is essential for children who have often experienced instability, neglect or
even abuse when they arrived.
OAfrica is working hard to ensure that each
foster family care placement will provide the essential love and support that
these children need to thrive, she added.
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