Tuesday, March 23, 2010
A Night of Hope- April 10, 2010
Tuesday, March 02, 2010
Christmas visits
Over the Christmas holidays, several LittleDrops volunteers were able to visit orphanages during their respective trips to Nigeria and Rwanda. Here are their stories:
Larissa Kaze -Rwanda
I visited 2 homes in Rwanda: Jya Mu BandiMwana and Home de la Vierge des Pauvres.
Home de la Vierge des Pauvres (HVP) is located in the southern part of Rwanda and is a high school for physically disabled children. The school teaches children that are blind and deaf mostly for clinical laboratory sciences. Most of the students get jobs in the nearby clinic as laboratorians. I was not able to meet the students as they had left for the holidays, however, I met the director of the school, Brother Kizito. He has received the money that LittleDrops sent and told me that he uses most of the funds to help students that cannot afford school uniforms or books. The school is financed by the Brothers of Charity in the Catholic Church and has all the necessary things including revenue generating items (crops, reception rooms, cows and pigs, etc). Students pay $300 (150,000 RWF) for tuition every semester.
Jyamubandi Mwana is located in Kigali, the capital city and is also a school that helps mentally and physically disabled children. It was founded by Xaverine, a woman that has a child with both mental and physical disabilities. All the schools had refused to enroll him after he was 18yrs old and was still in 7th grade so she decided to find a way to get him trained and that is how Jyamubandi was created. The school currently has about 85 kids, all stay there during school sessions and most of them come from very poor families. There are no fees to attend the school but the capacity of the school is limited. We went around the facilities and there are definitely a lot of needs and very little space.
Xaverine told me that she received the money that we sent and that she has been using most of it to buy food and medications for her students. She takes them to the hospitals as well and although she gets a discount the children's medical bills are high. The kids learn how to sew, make leather goods (shoes, bags) and paint. After graduation they can start a small business on their own. Xaverine promised to send the reports twice a year. We also discussed some of the other needs she thinks will help her, such as creating a small business specifically a cyber cafe that can generate money for the school. She thought it will also be beneficial to connect her school with another similar school in the US so that the kids can communicate and exchange ideas.
Ikenna Ekeh - Nigeria
Although I have been to St. Marys Orphanage on three occasions, I found it hard to locate the place. The residents of Gwagwalada did not seem to not know where it was, needless to have heard of it. Fortunately, I found the place by chance as I persevered. This was right after Christmas and I got to give the items (face caps and bags) that I brought for the orphans on behalf of Littledrops. The lady I met there, took me around to see the children. I also visited the bakery and new boys and girls hostel. The orphanage home seem to be doing quite well, especially with the bakery providing some sustainable income and food, They also have support from the Catholic Church.
We had disbursed money to the home first week in December, so I asked her if they received the money, for which she affirmed. I left the home and headed back to the city - about an hour drive and glad that I was able to make the trip and visit the adorable orphans especially the cute babies.
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Saturday, February 27, 2010
Spotlight on : Express Your Dreams Essay Winners
2) What is your favorite novel, and how has it changed your perspective of the world?
3) What is your biggest passion, and in what ways will it help you shape the world?
Friday, February 12, 2010
Media Coverage of LittleDrops!
"Charles Duze (pronounced d—oázay) could not believe his eyes: Children just like him - some even younger - rifling through trashcans behind his high school cafeteria, lucky-dipping for food! Charles was enrolled at Federal Government College, Enugu, in Eastern Nigeria.
Long after Nigeria's Civil War ended, early in the '70s, 'Coal City' still bore scars of the internecine feud that left many families in tatters. A generation later, their inheritors were yet to recover lost grounds.
"Seeing this, day after day, unlocked something in me," Charles recalls. It triggered an epiphany. "That was when I developed a real understanding and grew a passion for the plight of orphans." There had been previous encounters pointing him to his calling. It's all coming back as memories of his parents taking him on visits to orphanages and motherless babies' homes in Benin City, tucked away in Nigeria's Midwest, where he spent part of his childhood. On his own, he continued the pilgrimages to orphanages in Enugu.
After leaving Nigeria for the United States, Charles completed both first and second degrees against all odds and landed a job with Microsoft in Seattle, Washington. He thought of waiting to become wealthy to start a non-profit, but reckoned, "unless I win the lottery, becoming wealthy is way in the future for me!"
But his calling couldn't wait."....
View the rest of the article written for The Guardian at:
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Healthcare in Africa
Special Focus: issues affecting Orphans- Healthcare
Contributed by Blog Writer: Mashfiq Rahman
The current discussion on health care reform in United States has forced us to look at other healthcare system around the world. It is generally believed that many countries in the world have better healthcare system than the one in United States. However, that is not true for many of the countries in Africa.
Overall, the facts about the healthcare in Africa are quite grim. In 2002, 70% of people living with AIDS worldwide resided in Africa, home to only 10% of the world's population. Africa is the only continent where life expectancy has dropped below levels set in 1950s. According to United Nations, about 6000 children lose one of their parents to AIDS everyday, and 90 percent of these children are in Africa. Not to mention the fact that Africa spends three times more on repaying debts to rich Western countries and institutions than it does on providing health services and drugs for its sick and poor population.
Even in stabilized countries like South Africa, Botswana, Kenya, Nigeria, Namibia, Zambia and Ghana, political and social stability has brought further scrutiny on how they manage diseases. Managing diabetes, heart disease and cancer require a sustainable health care infrastructure which these countries lack due to crude network of unpaved roads and rural villages.
How to fix healthcare in Africa? One solution is to find a more efficient system of providing generic drugs, vaccines and other simple treatments. Many lives will be saved by providing inexpensive, basic remedies and cheap medicines. Generic antibiotics are capable of saving many of the 1.8 million who die every year from bacterial pneumonia. In fact, around 50 cent is sufficient to treat Malnutrition or diarrhea. Another way to ensure a dependable supply of high-quality drugs is to copy the tactics of retail franchises. Health Store Foundation in Africa is developing retail franchises by subsidizing nurses in rural parts of Kenya to open for-profit retail clinics. Charitable foundations in Kenya, created by Health Store, provide drugs and supplies, train nurses and check clinics to ensure quality standards. Kenya's 65 shops have so far treated 400,000 patients and there are plans to expand into other countries.
In Africa, only 1.3% of the world’s health workers are available to combat against its 25% share of the world’s diseases. If developed countries provide part-time community workers, they will make sure people are taking their daily HIV or TB medicines and provide basic health education. Community workers are vital in improving infra-structures to poor African communities. Nurses can be provided to distant parts of Africa that has no access to health care. Instead of sending just donations, developed countries might send financial experts to provide remote clinics in Africa with basic management expertise. Rural health centers need all sorts of help tracking expenses, setting up drug-order systems and learning back-office functions. Also, cheap and long-lasting, insecticide-treated bed net provided to villages are an easy way to prevent malaria. Trials in the 1990s showed the nets could reduce malaria cases by 60% and child mortality by nearly 20%.
Victor Barnes, who directs health initiatives at the Corporate Council on Africa, says the private sector is needed to maximize those resources. A combination made between allocated funds and the expertise of corporations that recognize "enlightened self-interest" will help achieve significant return on investment in Africa's health care marketplace.
Recently President Barack Obama pledged $63 billion for health care in Africa during his visit to Ghana. He said the amount will go to strengthen public health. However, this plan can only be viewed with skepticism due to America’s current domestic healthcare and economic development. The tragic fact that Africa's most productive population is being decimated, paints a gloomy picture for the future. It is the children, teachers, doctors, lawyers, and young energetic farmers and workers who are most affected. The rest of the world needs to take steps to fix Africa’s healthcare inadequacies and end the plunging of living standards in Africa.
Sources:
In Pictures: Seven Ways To Fix Health Care In Africa
Obama pledges $63 billion for health care in Africa
http://ghanabusinessnews.com/2009/07/11/obama-pledges-63-billion-for-health-care-in-africa/
Health Care in Africa: a Human Rights Catastrophe
http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-21692692_ITM
DAS: Health care in Africa
http://washingtontimes.com/news/2008/dec/28/health-care-in-africa/print/
Factsheet: Health Worker Crisis in Africa
http://healthgap.org/camp/HCWfactsheet.html