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Caring for children with neurodevelopmental disability: Experiences from caretakers and health workers in rural eastern Uganda

BACKGROUND: Long term outcomes of children with neurodevelopmental disability are influenced by the condition itself, available health services and caretakers’ coping ability to nurture the children which may be related to their beliefs and experiences. Most children with neurodevelopmental disabili...

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Autores principales: Namazzi, Gertrude, Hanson, Claudia, Nalwadda, Christine, Tetui, Moses, Nampijja, Margaret, Waiswa, Peter, Tumwine, James K., Hildenwall, Helena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7384645/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32716925
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236488
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author Namazzi, Gertrude
Hanson, Claudia
Nalwadda, Christine
Tetui, Moses
Nampijja, Margaret
Waiswa, Peter
Tumwine, James K.
Hildenwall, Helena
author_facet Namazzi, Gertrude
Hanson, Claudia
Nalwadda, Christine
Tetui, Moses
Nampijja, Margaret
Waiswa, Peter
Tumwine, James K.
Hildenwall, Helena
author_sort Namazzi, Gertrude
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Long term outcomes of children with neurodevelopmental disability are influenced by the condition itself, available health services and caretakers’ coping ability to nurture the children which may be related to their beliefs and experiences. Most children with neurodevelopmental disabilities live in resource constrained settings. To inform design of contextually appropriate interventions, this study explored health workers’ and caretakers’ experiences in caring for infants with neurodevelopmental disability in rural eastern Uganda. METHODS: A qualitative case study was carried out in December 2017 and involved in-depth interviews with 14 caretakers of infants with severe neurodevelopmental disability, and five health workers in Iganga/Mayuge Demographic Surveillance Site in eastern Uganda. The interviews with caretakers were conducted in Lusoga, the local language, and in English for the health workers, using a pre-determined open-ended interview guide. Data were analyzed using latent content analysis. RESULTS: Caretakers described the experience of caring for children with neurodevelopmental disability as impoverishing and ‘imprisoning’ due to high care costs, inability to return to income generating activities and nursing challenges. The latter resulted from failure in body control and several aspects of nutrition and maintaining vital functions, coupled with limited support from the community and the health system. Many caretakers expressed beliefs in supernatural causes of neurodevelopmental disability though they reported about complications during and shortly after the birth of the affected child. Care-seeking was often challenging and impeded by costs and the feeling of lack of improvement. The health care system was also found to be incapable of adequately addressing the needs of such children due to lack of commodities, and human resource limitations. CONCLUSION: The caretakers expressed a feeling of emotional stress due to being left alone with a high nursing burden. Improvement in the health services including a holistic approach to care, improved community awareness and parental support could contribute to nursing of children with NDD.
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spelling pubmed-73846452020-08-05 Caring for children with neurodevelopmental disability: Experiences from caretakers and health workers in rural eastern Uganda Namazzi, Gertrude Hanson, Claudia Nalwadda, Christine Tetui, Moses Nampijja, Margaret Waiswa, Peter Tumwine, James K. Hildenwall, Helena PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Long term outcomes of children with neurodevelopmental disability are influenced by the condition itself, available health services and caretakers’ coping ability to nurture the children which may be related to their beliefs and experiences. Most children with neurodevelopmental disabilities live in resource constrained settings. To inform design of contextually appropriate interventions, this study explored health workers’ and caretakers’ experiences in caring for infants with neurodevelopmental disability in rural eastern Uganda. METHODS: A qualitative case study was carried out in December 2017 and involved in-depth interviews with 14 caretakers of infants with severe neurodevelopmental disability, and five health workers in Iganga/Mayuge Demographic Surveillance Site in eastern Uganda. The interviews with caretakers were conducted in Lusoga, the local language, and in English for the health workers, using a pre-determined open-ended interview guide. Data were analyzed using latent content analysis. RESULTS: Caretakers described the experience of caring for children with neurodevelopmental disability as impoverishing and ‘imprisoning’ due to high care costs, inability to return to income generating activities and nursing challenges. The latter resulted from failure in body control and several aspects of nutrition and maintaining vital functions, coupled with limited support from the community and the health system. Many caretakers expressed beliefs in supernatural causes of neurodevelopmental disability though they reported about complications during and shortly after the birth of the affected child. Care-seeking was often challenging and impeded by costs and the feeling of lack of improvement. The health care system was also found to be incapable of adequately addressing the needs of such children due to lack of commodities, and human resource limitations. CONCLUSION: The caretakers expressed a feeling of emotional stress due to being left alone with a high nursing burden. Improvement in the health services including a holistic approach to care, improved community awareness and parental support could contribute to nursing of children with NDD. Public Library of Science 2020-07-27 /pmc/articles/PMC7384645/ /pubmed/32716925 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236488 Text en © 2020 Namazzi et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Namazzi, Gertrude
Hanson, Claudia
Nalwadda, Christine
Tetui, Moses
Nampijja, Margaret
Waiswa, Peter
Tumwine, James K.
Hildenwall, Helena
Caring for children with neurodevelopmental disability: Experiences from caretakers and health workers in rural eastern Uganda
title Caring for children with neurodevelopmental disability: Experiences from caretakers and health workers in rural eastern Uganda
title_full Caring for children with neurodevelopmental disability: Experiences from caretakers and health workers in rural eastern Uganda
title_fullStr Caring for children with neurodevelopmental disability: Experiences from caretakers and health workers in rural eastern Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Caring for children with neurodevelopmental disability: Experiences from caretakers and health workers in rural eastern Uganda
title_short Caring for children with neurodevelopmental disability: Experiences from caretakers and health workers in rural eastern Uganda
title_sort caring for children with neurodevelopmental disability: experiences from caretakers and health workers in rural eastern uganda
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7384645/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32716925
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236488
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