Some mothers and their malnourished kids at the centre |
A few kilometres away from this dam is
another institution that should equally attract attention, especially from the
development community.
It is certainly not a hotel or zoo but a
charitable organisation that provides quality education, healthcare, water and
sanitation services to the deprived communities in the Tolon and Kumbungu
districts.
Among the services that the King's Village offers, the one that touched me most was the provision of paediatric care and long term rehabilitation for children suffering from severe malnourishment.
Among the services that the King's Village offers, the one that touched me most was the provision of paediatric care and long term rehabilitation for children suffering from severe malnourishment.
The King's Village Project, as it is
called, was established by Rev Ben Owusu-Sekyere and his wife, Rev Marion
Owusu-Sekyere, both of whom settled in Northern Ghana in 1999 having returned
from the United Kingdom (UK) to continue with their missionary work.
Rev Ben Owusu Sekyere and Rev Marion Owusu-Sekyere |
They initiated this charity project in
2003 with support from the Christian Centre of the Assemblies of God Church
based in Nottingham in the UK, which they were affiliated to.
Just before the Christmas break, I
visited Bontanga and I could not help but marvel at how God had used these two
evangelists to transform the lives of children, women and entire communities.
Under the project, they had succeeded in
establishing an educational complex that provides quality education, at
virtually no cost, to children from these communities, some of whom walk or
ride from villages more than five miles away.
“We pay GH¢10 at the beginning of each
term. We are very happy that our children are also receiving quality education
and we pray that God supports pastor and his wife,” said Alhassan Adam, a
farmer who is the father of a nursery-three pupil, Nuhu Alhassan.
A proud father picking his child at the close of school at the King's Village |
In 2005, the couple succeeded in
fulfilling another vision of theirs by establishing a medical centre to address
the health needs of the people and reduce the incidence of deaths resulting
from malaria, cholera and labour-related complications.
“We realized that a number of children
were dying from preventable and treatable conditions, like malaria and we felt
the need to do something about it,” Rev Owusu-Sekyere said in an interview.
He said they also found out that
two-thirds of these communities did not have clean water and sanitation
services and so went a step further to drill boreholes and construct household
latrines in a number of these communities with funding support from their
international donors.
Care
for malnourished children
Among the services that the King's
Village offers, the one that touched me most was the provision of paediatric
care and long term rehabilitation for children suffering from severe
malnourishment.
Having witnessed how some children
brought to the medical centre were at the point of death as a result of
malnourishment, Mr and Mrs Owusu-Sekyere were inspired to set up a special unit
to breathe new life into these children.
With funds from two of their volunteers
from Nottingham, Mr and Mrs Terry Carpenter, a Nutrition Centre was established
less than 100 meters away from the medical centre.
When I got to centre, I was moved by the
sight of a skeletal boy sitting on the lap of his mother.
I must confess that I had never seen a
severely malnourished child physically, except those I see on television from
places like Somalia.
Hadija undressing her son |
His mother, 30-year-old Hadija Abu said
her son, who was over two years, became sick a year after birth, but they could
not tell what was wrong with him.
“He started to have higher temperature
and later developed skin rashes all over his body. Later, he lost appetite and
his situation grew from bad to worse until we came here,” she narrated.
Sitting next to them was another young
mother, Awabu Mahamudu and her emaciated four-year old daughter, Amina Issah.
“She has been sick since birth and in
spite of all that we did, her condition never improved,” 36-year old Awabu
said.
Both mothers however maintained that the
health of their children had begun to improve since they arrived at the centre
a few weeks back.
“They were worse than what you are
seeing. Now they eat better and are gaining weight,” Hadija said.
The Nutrition Officer in charge of the
centre, Mr Norma Abudu Birresborn said children brought to the centre mostly
suffer from three main conditions: kwashiorkor, marasmus and marasmus
kwashiorkor.
These conditions, he explained, indicate
low levels of protein and energy in these children, adding that children with
these conditions are thin and have bloated stomachs and yellowish sparse hair,
among others.
“When they arrive, they are usually in a
precarious state and so the first thing we do is to stabilize them, such as
normalizing their temperature and treating any infections,” Mr Birresborn
indicated.
He said during the rehabilitation phase,
the children are given medication, nutritional meals and some food supplements.
Attached to the Nutrition Centre is a
traditional-styled compound house with ten rooms where children admitted to the
centre stay with their mothers or caregivers during the rehabilitation stage.
Inside the compound, I saw a middle-aged
woman drying corn and pepper, whilst two healthy-looking children were playing
‘catch me if you can.’
The woman, Mma Sakina Yakubu told me
that she was the caretaker of the two children, Fuseina and Alhassan, who are
twins and that they were brought to the centre in the early days of its
operation, but had now recovered successfully.
“Both of them are in class three at the
school,” she said.
The
bigger picture
Malnutrition remains one of the threats
to the country's efforts to attain the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) on
reducing child mortality (goal four) and eradicating extreme poverty and hunger
(goal one).
According to the World Food Programme
(WFP), malnutrition occurs “when a person is not getting enough food” and that
“even if people get enough to eat, they will become malnourished if the food
they eat does not provide the proper amounts of micronutrients - vitamins and
minerals - to meet daily nutritional requirements.”
The United Nation's Standing Committee
on Nutrition (SCN) claims that malnutrition is the largest single contributor
to disease and that it also affects the mental and physical development of
children.
The Ghana Health Service (GHS) recently
painted a grim picture about the state of malnutrition among Ghanaian children
when it revealed that 12,000 children in Ghana die every year of ailments due
to malnutrition.
The Deputy Chief Nutrition Officer at
the GHS, Mrs Esi Amoaful, who made this disclosure, further indicated that “one
out of every thirteen children in Ghana die before their fifth birthday mostly
as a result of under-nutrition.”
She mentioned the Northern, Upper East,
Central, Western and Eastern regions as the most affected regions.
Mma Sakina and Fuseina |
He attributed this downward trend to a
number of interventions implemented by the GHS in partnership with its
development partners, such as the supply of supplementary drugs to children.
The Northern Region was one of the
regions that benefitted from the Nutrition and Malaria Control for Child
Survival Project (NMCCSP), a five-year World Bank-funded project that sought to
strengthen community-based health and nutrition services for pregnant women and
children under the age of two.
One unique component of the project,
which spanned 2007-2012, was the promotion of indigenous meals prepared with
ingredients, like moringa, beans, agushi, smoked fish and spinach.
The Programme Manager of this project,
Mrs Hannah Adjei told the Daily Graphic
that local foods contained the recommended combination of nutrients needed to
support the growth of children.
Indeed, the King's Village Nutrition
Centre as part of its services trains caregivers in how to prepare nutritious
local meals for their children, particularly those affected by malnutrition.
“We train them in the preparation of
‘winimix’, which is made from corn, soya bean, groundnut and millet,” the Nutrition
Officer stated.
One thing that remains significant is
that the King’s Village Nutrition Centre is as important to the deprived
villages of Tolon and Kumbungu as water is to the people in the desert.
It can however continue to offer these
life-saving services if it gets the needed partnership and funding support from
the government, philanthropists and donor agencies.
(This article was also published in the Daily Graphic, Jan 29, 2013, page 40-41)
(This article was also published in the Daily Graphic, Jan 29, 2013, page 40-41)
4 comments:
Thank you Nurideen for highlighting this work to the whole world!
Pastor Ben Owusu-Sekyere
I always feel inclined to support a worthy cause. Well done, Mr and Mrs Owusu-Sekyere.
It is sad to know about the deficiency of nutrition people are facing. To help with this, food supplements like Solgar have been serving their products over the years.
Please I want the Address of Kings medical centre.
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