Just Care News and Articles
- Good News for Christmas! Wellspring Centre Open for Business!
- Just Care tackles the big problems in Uganda
- MALARIA - The Greatest Killer of Childeren in the World Today
Good News for Christmas! Wellspring Centre Open for Business!
On December 3rd 2007 the newly developed Wellspring Children’s Medical Centre in Kamutuuza, Uganda, was opened for business.
All building work is now complete, the centre is registered with Ugandan health authorities, budgets have been agreed, staff contracts have been drawn up and adverts posted in local media. A British nurse is presently working as a volunteer in Kamutuuza, providing nursing expertise and organising the setting up of the clinics.
Just Care sees the opening of the medial centre as a miraculous achievement following 3 years of intense planning, negotiations and fund raising. Our thanks go out to all those who have provided advice, practical help and funding during this time.
Fund raising to date has enabled the centre to be built and equipped and provide sufficient funds to meet the budget for the first 12 months. Fund raising continues into 2008, aiming to raise a minimum of £40,000 within the year, to provide for all 2009 running costs and future development.
Just Care tackles the big problems in Uganda
The UK charity, Just Care, (registred charity no: 1063998) has been working in the village of Kamutuuza in rural Uganda for the past 7 years. The principal objectives for the charity’s Ugandan work is to encourage, enable and support the people of Uganda to develop and improve their education, health, economic independence and spiritual lives, with a particular emphasis on the educational, social and medical needs of the many thousands of children in the district.
The Just Care work in Kamutuuza is situated on a 16 acre site which presently provides education for over 1000 children from the age of 4 to 18 years. The development of 2 schools, Tower Junior School and Bexhill Senior School, has been funded through Just Care and many sponsors from the UK continue to support Ugandan children through their education. Education is of a high standard and the children are taught up to “O” level. Some children board at the school during term time. Dormitories have been provided for this purpose. 50% of the population of Uganda is under 14 years of age and of these children there are approximately 2 million orphans. Having observed the urgent needs of the many orphans living in Kamutuuza and surrounding villages, Just Care funded the building of an orphanage on the school site, where 60 children from the age of 4 to 16 years are housed, fed, educated and all their needs met in a loving and caring environment.
LOCAL HEALTH ISSUES
Kamatuuza has little health provision and many people have to walk between five and ten miles to the local hospitals to access health care. In most cases this makes health care inaccessible and unaffordable. In 2004 Dr Pauline Hutchinson was asked to visit the area to advise on the health needs of the local children. Her observations and those of other professionals over the past three years have highlighted the desperate lack of health care and consequent high morbidity and mortality amongst the children. Average life expectancy is still only 46 years and 69 out of every 1000 children die in childhood, the probability of death before the age of 5 years being 14.3%.
AIDS
Ugandan health statistics state that 84,000 Ugandan children are thought to have HIV or AIDS. This figure however is probably very much higher since birth, health and death records in the rural communities are rarely kept. Children are often born and die with no record ever having been made of their existence. In 2005, the World Health Organisation estimated that 200,000 Ugandan children under the age of 14 years had HIV infection. A local health professional working in the Masaka health District has informed us that of the 20,000 people living in the “parish” of which Kamutuuza is one of 6 villages, 10,000 are children and all of these have been affected by AIDS. Despite Ugandan and world information to the contrary AIDS continues to be a serious and continuing problem for Ugandan children.
MALARIA
Malaria continues to be the greatest killer of Ugandan children. 720,000 under fives and over one million fives and over are reported to have clinical malaria. 43% of deaths of under fives are attributed to malaria. Of course, this problem is exacerbated by the high number of children who are immunosuppressed by HIV infection. Malaria does not only cause ill health and death but also has a great impact on the economic and social development of the family and the individual child.
WATER & SANITATION
Water borne diseases continue to be a serious threat to child health. In the villages, water is collected, mainly by the children, usually twice daily, from water holes often some distance from their homes. These water holes are highly polluted and are breeding grounds for mosquitoes. Sanitation and personal hygiene is also poor adding to the threat of ill health amongst the children. On the Kamutuuza children’s site a new water supply, toilets and washing facilities are presently being installed in an attempt to protect the children from water borne diseases and to educate them on the importance and advantages of clean water and hygienic sanitation systems.
HOSPITAL FACILITIES
The dedicated staff at the local government hospital in Masaka are working under often impossible conditions. In the one children’s ward at the hospital, built in 1949 to cater for 30 children, up to 100 children are cared for at one time. The majority of these children are under the age of 5 years, any older children, if they reach the hospital at all, have to be cared for on adult wards. During the malaria seasons children share beds and sleep in corridors. Children with highly infectious diseases such as TB have to be put in cots alongside other, often immuno-suppressed, children thus creating a great risk of cross infection. Equipment is inadequate and often breaking down and drugs are in short supply. A recent visit to the ward revealed that of the many children admitted almost all had sicknesses directly related to AIDS. Malnutrition also continues to be a serious problem and a killer of children.
THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD
As a direct consequence of poverty and disease the children of Uganda are struggling to survive, with low expectations for a healthy or a prosperous future. However, these children are the country’s most precious commodity and deserve, along with all children, world class health care and education, a secure future and the means to reach their full potential in life. In a speech made by Gordon Brown in January 2005 he stated, “Surely it is our belief that every child is precious: Every child is unique: Every child is very special: Every child deserves our support: No child should be left out: Every child matters: Every child counts. You cannot blame a child for her poverty. You cannot hold a child responsible for her deprivation. You cannot condemn a child for no fault of her own. You cannot consider a child, however sick, as of no consequence… and dismiss her as unproductive or uneconomic. But that is what we allow to happen.” He later stated, “I saw in Africa – more clearly than anything else: a healthcare system in crisis; and education in crisis too; and the terrible human cost of these failures. Millions of people who are sick or injured or simply frail are deprived of the life saving health care they urgently need.”
CHILDREN OF KAMUTUUZA
The devastating results of poverty, inadequate health facilities, dirty water supplies and poor sanitation are clearly seen in Kamutuuza and surrounding communities. The children will never reach their full potential educationally and as functioning members of their communities unless these issues are met. Just Care shares the views of WHO, UNICEF and other world authorities, that we all share responsibility for the deprived and suffering in our world, in particular those who are most vulnerable and dependent on the care of others, the children of our world. We strongly advocate the basic rights of all children to survival, development, protection and support.
Bishop Samuel Kamya, Bishop of the West Bugandan Diocese, states “One area where the Church and state have failed miserably is the area of health care provision to all. Malaria still triumphantly surges on killing young and old alike, by the thousands each year. Water borne diseases march on unchecked - in the absence of a clean water programme. …. On the other side one has a rapidly growing population, ever-falling incomes, inadequate treatment facilities and a severe shortage of professional personnel. Treatment costs for common ailments are too high for ordinary folks…. As a church … we have a belief that facilities in terms of treatment centres should be availed closer to the people … at a cost that most people can afford.”
MALARIA - The Greatest Killer of Childeren in the World Today
WHAT IS MALARIA?
- Malaria is caused by four species of parasitic protozoa that infect human red blood cells. Protozoa are one-celled organisms that are as sophisticated as a human cell. Malaria parasites feed on red blood cells for a living.
- Malaria parasites have a complex life cycle. In order to live, they need to have both a human and a mosquito host. The mosquito host can't be just "any" mosquito. It has to be a female mosquito of the genus Anopheles. The mosquito picks up the malaria parasites from the blood of an infected human when it feeds. The parasite reproduces itself in the gut of the Anopheles mosquito, forming a sac with thousands of new malaria parasites. The parasites need the mosquito to continue their life cycle. In order to infect an individual, the infected mosquito has to live 15 days at which point the parasites burst out of their sac and reach the salivary gland of the mosquito. Then, the mosquito passes the malaria parasites to the human through its salivary glands.
- There are four different species of malaria parasites causing types of malaria that are somewhat different from each other. These species are Plasmodium falciparum, vivax, malariae and ovale.
- The worst type is caused by Plasmodium falciparum.
- Infection with Plasmodium falciparum kills approximately 1-2% of those who come down with it.
- Falciparum malaria is a serious illness characterized by fever, headache, and weakness.
- Complications of falciparum malaria include cerebral malaria, in which the brain is infected, severe malaria, in which the parasitic infection essentially "runs out of control," and placental malaria, in which falciparum is a grave complication of pregnancy, and coma.
- Each of these complications is very serious and often fatal.
- Falciparum malaria is the major type found in subSaharan Africa, where 90% of the world's malaria cases occur.
- Unfortunately, falciparum malaria is also frequently resistant to drugs and is becoming more common in high elevation areas of Africa, and in portions of Asia.
- The other species of malaria cause a debilitating illness characterized by spells of chills, fever and weakness. This illness generally lasts 10-14 days, and is self-limiting in nature. The malaria caused by these species is rarely fatal.
A WORLD WIDE PROBLEM
Malaria is preventable and curable, yet at endemic levels in the world’s poorest countries. Around 2.5 billion people (at least 40% of the world’s population) are at risk of malaria in over 90 countries. Malaria causes or contributes to 3 million deaths and up to 500 million acute clinical cases each year. In other words, almost as many deaths per annum as the AIDS death total in the last 15 years. The majority of deaths are children. Our world’s children are dying at a rate of 4 per minute, 5,000 a day and 35,000 a week. Other high risk groups include pregnant women, refugees, migrant workers, and non-immune travelers . Malaria is one of leading causes of morbidity and mortality in the developing world (along with TB, acute respiratory syndrome, diarrhoea and HIV) but still not recognised in developed countries as a disaster such as AIDS.
Malaria kills more people today than three decades ago. Reasons for the spread include: increasing drug resistance, increased migration and immigration, decreased mosquito control efforts (insecticide spraying), deforestation and mining (development activities) Over 35 years ago malaria had been eradicated or dramatically reduced in 37 countries through the WHO insecticide spraying programme, but this situation is rapidly reversing. The reversal is largely due to the cost of sustaining programmes, loss of motivation in the face of a seemingly declining threat, and the development of insecticide and drug resistance.
Malaria exacts an enormous toll in lives, medical costs and days of labour lost. Educational systems also suffer as large numbers of children miss several weeks of school each year in endemic regions.
MALARIA AND AFRICA
Malaria is Africa's leading cause of under-five mortality and constitutes 10% of the continent's overall disease burden. It accounts for 40% of public health expenditure, 30-50% of inpatient admissions, and up to 50% of outpatient visits in areas with high malaria transmission. There are several reasons why Africa bears an overwhelming proportion of the malaria burden. Most malaria infections in Africa south of the Sahara are caused by Plasmodium falciparum, the most severe and life-threatening form of the disease. This region is also home to the most efficient, and therefore deadly, species of the mosquitoes which transmit the disease. Moreover, many countries in Africa lack the infrastructures and resources necessary to mount sustainable campaigns against malaria and as a result few benefited from historical efforts to eradicate malaria. In Africa today, malaria is understood to be both a disease of poverty and a cause of poverty. Annual economic growth in countries with high malaria transmission has historically been lower than in countries without malaria. Malaria also has a direct impact on Africa's human resources. Not only does malaria result in lost life and lost productivity due to illness and premature death, but malaria also hampers children's schooling and social development through both absenteeism and permanent neurological and other damage associated with severe episodes of the disease.
One of the greatest challenges facing Africa in the fight against malaria is drug resistance. Resistance to chloroquine, the cheapest and most widely used antimalarial, is common throughout Africa. Resistance to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, often seen as the first and least expensive alternative to chloroquine, is also increasing in east and southern Africa. As a result of these trends, many countries are having to change their treatment policies and use drugs which are more expensive, including combinations of drugs, which it is hoped will slow the development of resistance.
MALARIA AND HIV/AIDS
Malaria and HIV are two of the most devastating global health problems of our time. Together they cause more than 4 million deaths a year. Both are diseases of poverty, and both are causes of poverty. To a considerable extent, both are concentrated in the same geographical regions. The resulting co-infection and interaction between the two diseases have major public health implications. HIV-infected people must be considered particularly vulnerable to malaria.
Where both diseases occur, more attention must be given to specific diagnosis for febrile patients. In HIV-infected individuals, a malaria case definition based on fever alone can result in a febrile illness due to a wide range of ordinary, virulent and opportunistic infections being misdiagnosed and treated as malaria. This may lead to inappropriate care of HIV-infected adults with severe febrile illnesses due to causes other than malaria.
Evidence of interactions between malaria and HIV in non- pregnant adults is accumulating. In areas with stable malaria, HIV increases the risk of malaria infection and clinical malaria in adults, especially in those with advanced immunosuppression. In settings with unstable malaria, HIV-infected adults are at increased risk of complicated and severe malaria and death.
Additional research is needed to investigate the impact of malaria on the natural history of HIV, potential therapeutic implications, and interactions at a cellular and molecular level.
Acute malaria episodes cause a temporary increase in viral replication of HIV and hence plasma viral load. However, there is no evidence that malaria has a substantial effect on clinical progression of HIV, HIV transmission or response to antiretroviral treatment in areas where malaria and HIV overlap.
Few studies have examined the interaction of malaria and HIV in children. In areas of stable malaria, HIV-infected children may be at increased risk of clinical malaria compared to children not infected with HIV. Advanced immunosuppression in HIV- infected children results in more episodes of clinical malaria and higher parasite densities compared with HIV-infected children whose immune status is less compromised. In areas of unstable malaria HIV-infected children may be at increased risk of severe disease and death.
The effects of interactions between malaria and HIV are particularly deleterious to maternal and infant health. HIV infection impairs the ability of pregnant women to control P. falciparum infection. They are more likely to develop clinical and placental malaria, more often have detectable malaria parasitaemia and have higher malaria parasite densities.
Compared to women with either malaria or HIV infection, co-infected pregnant women are at increased risk of anaemia, preterm birth and intrauterine growth retardation. As a result, a considerable proportion of children born to women with dual malaria and HIV infection have low birth weight and are more likely to die during infancy.
CHILDREN AND MALARIA
- Children are especially vulnerable to malaria.
- Malaria kills one child every 30 seconds in the world today.
- Children aged one to four are the most vulnerable to infection and death. Malaria is responsible for as many as half the deaths of African children under the age of five.
- The disease kills more than one million children - 2,800 per day - each year in Africa alone.
- In regions of intense transmission, 40% of toddlers may die of acute malaria.
Anaemia, low birth-weight, epilepsy, and neurological problems, all frequent consequences of malaria, compromise the health and development of millions of children throughout the tropical world. Yet much of the impact of malaria on the world’s children could be prevented with currently available interventions. Of the more than 500,000 African children who develop cerebral malaria (a severe form of the disease that affects the brain) each year, 10-20% die and approximately 7% are left with permanent neurological damage. Children with malaria typically develop fever, vomiting, headache and flu-like symptoms. If untreated, the disease may progress rapidly (often within 24 hours) to convulsions, coma, and death.
Malaria is a major cause of anaemia in many parts of the world. Chronic anaemia may adversely affect a child’s growth and intellectual development. Repeated episodes of malaria may lead to severe, life-threatening anaemia. Blood transfusions may save lives in these circumstances, but also expose the child to the risk of HIV and other blood-borne infections.
A reduction of illness and death in young children can be achieved through:
- Prevention: Children must be protected from the mosquitoes that transmit malaria. The best way to do this is to ensure that they sleep under insecticide-treated nets (ITNs). Studies in Africa have shown that ITNs can reduce deaths among under-fives by up to one-third.
- Prompt recognition and effective treatment: There is an urgent need to ensure that effective and affordable antimalarial drugs or drug combinations are widely available to all individuals living in malaria-endemic areas.
- Anaemia: Parents and healthcare workers must be trained to recognize the clinical signs of anaemia, and to seek treatment. Malaria, nutritional iron deficiency and intestinal parasites (such as hookworm) are the most common and preventable causes of anaemia in much of the developing world.
- Prevention of malaria-related low birth weight: Pregnant mothers must be encouraged to use ITNs and take advantage of Intermittent Preventive Treatment. This has been shown to increase birth weight, a major determinant of child survival.
UGANDAN CHILDREN
In Uganda, malaria has historically been a very serious health problem and currently poses the most significant threat to the health of the population.
Malaria currently accounts for:
- 25 – 40% 0f all out-patient visits at health facilities.
- 20% of hospital admissions.
- 23.4% of total discounted life years lost.
- 9 – 14% of in-patient deaths.
Malaria is the main killer of Ugandan children:
- 720,000 under fives and over one million fives and over are reported to have clinical malaria.
- 43% of deaths of under fives, in Uganda, are attributed to malaria and malaria accounts for 70,000 – 110,000 child deaths annually.
- With acute disease a child may die within 24 hours.
Malaria kills children often in combination with other diseases, including HIV.
Malaria also causes:
- Childhood anaemia
- Reduced growth (stunting)
- Mental retardation
- An average of 6 episodes of malaria each year
- Severe malarial anaemia resulting in a case fatality rate of 8-25% among paediatric admissions
- Up to 70% of out-patient attendances and over 50% of in-patient admissions in the under 5s.
In pregnancy, malaria may cause:
- Maternal anaemia (particularly in prime gravidae)
- Intra-uterine growth retardation
- Premature births
- Low-weight babies which is the principal contributor to infant mortality
- Still births
- Abortions/miscarriages - malaria is responsible for nearly 60% of miscarriages
- Pregnant women are 4 times as likely to suffer malaria attacks during pregnancy than when not.
Malaria does not only cause ill health and death but also has a great impact on the economic and social development of the family and the individual child.
- Expenditure on treatment and prevention. A poor malaria-stricken family may spend up to 25% of its income on malaria treatment and prevention.
- Malaria affects families most during the rainy season when families least afford to be sick, malaria interferes with their farm activities thus causing poverty in families.
- Loss of household incomes through absenteeism from work.
- Malaria causes absenteeism from school, thus affecting school performance. It is estimated that in endemic areas like Uganda, malaria may impair as much as 60% of the schoolchildren’s learning ability.
- Frequent illness or deaths of children due to malaria can lead to misunderstandings within families and between families. Those with sickly or dying children often are likely to accuse others whose children do not fall sick or die of bewitching their children which leads to hatred within and between families.
WELLSPRING CHILDREN’S MEDICAL CENTRE
Malaria is a leading cause of ill health, poverty and death in Uganda with the children being the most vulnerable to this disease and its consequences. It is inevitable that a great proportion of the children attending the Wellspring Medical Centre will be suffering from either acute attacks of malaria or the consequences of the disease. To be able to deal adequately and efficiently with such a work load Just Care plans to provide a specialised day care facility for malaria victims alone. This is addition, to malaria care provided in the general health clinics and outreach work. With the prospect of AIDS and other serious diseases causing problems with a definitive diagnosis of malaria, it is important that staff are trained to use laboratory equipment efficiently to ensure an accurate and prompt diagnosis of the disease. Advice regarding appropriate treatment regimes is to be sought from Kitovu Hospital. Any child who is at increased risk due to, for example, age, signs of cerebral malaria, anaemia etc, will be immediately referred to a more specialised unit.
One of the aims of the Wellspring Medical Centre is to reduce the mortality and morbidity rates for those children in the villages suffering from an acute malaria attack by ensuring prompt treatment and urgent referral to a paediatric unit when necessary. In addition, as part of the health education programme, advice will be given with regard to prevention of the disease with the use of mosquito nets, insect repellents and clearance of any areas of stagnant water etc.. Practical provision of mosquito nets will be given to those at greatest risk and with low incomes. Essential follow clinics will also be available for those children diagnosed with acute or chronic malaria.
Just Care is aware that the opening of an acute malaria unit will require dedication and expertise of the part of the staff and a huge financial undertaking with regard to medication, laboratory equipment and staffing, and referral costs. However, with so many children at risk of sickness and death as a result of this killer disease we cannot ignore the problem and will continue to appeal for assistance with regard to expert advice and funding to enable this unit to eventually open and develop.
One mosquito net can be purchased at the cost of £4!
£10 will provide 100 children with anti malarial medication!
Every child in the world is priceless.
No task is too vast, no price is too high to save the life of a child.
Just Care believes that God wants the very best for the neglected children of Uganda but He relies on those with much to provide for those who have nothing.

