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Home Based Care Alliance

~ Grassroots Women & AIDS

Home Based Care Alliance

Tag Archives: Uganda

Home-Based Care Alliance Newsletter Features United Methodist Special Advance

02 Friday Dec 2011

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Cameroon, GROOTS Zimbabwe, Home Based Care Alliance, IWCC, Nigeria, South Africa, Uganda, United Methodist Advance

Since 2009, the United Methodist Church Special Advance has partnered with the Home-Based Care Alliance to support the work of women caregivers from ten African nations who  volunteer their time, energy, and resources, making up for weak and overburdened public health systems.  This edition of the Home-Based Care Alliance Newsletter features groups of organized caregivers who received funds though the Special Advance. Read the HBCA Newsletter Special Advance Edition 2011 here!

HBCA Newsletter Special Edition 2011

The Advance is an official program of The United Methodist Church through which United Methodist districts, local churches, organizations, individuals and families may choose to support particular, approved mission programs with their financial
gifts. Donors to the Advance are contributing to the advancement of the Home-Based Care Alliance by providing funds that go directly to grassroots home-based caregivers who collectively prioritize the money for home-based care kits, gloves, medicines, food for the sick, clothing, and books for orphans. This support allows the women to provide much needed health services working in the poorest and most marginalized communities without sacrificing their sparse income in service to their communities.

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Vol 1, Issue 2 of the Home-Based Care Alliance Quarterly Newsletter Available Online

09 Tuesday Aug 2011

Posted by Home Based Care Alliance in Home

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Benin, GROOTS, home based care, Home Based Care Alliance, home based caregivers, Huairou Commission, ICA Lambassa, IWCC, Nigeria, slum women's initiative for development, Uganda, Zambia, Zambia Homeless and Poor People’s Federation

GROOTS International and the Huairou Commission are pleased to present Volume 1, Issue 2 of the quarterly Home-Based Care Alliance Newsletter. In this issue, caregivers from Home-Based Care Alliances in Benin, Zambia, Nigeria and Uganda share what drove them to begin caring for those in their communities and to organize Alliances to advocate for the priorities of those they care for and gain recognition from their governments.

Recognition by the government for their tireless work and contribution to their communities stood out as key to caregivers across their.  Caregivers from Benin working with ICA Lambassa share how they began providing home-based care when no one else was and organizing the caregivers in their communities to gain recognition.  A caregiver working with the Zambia  Homeless and Poor Peoples Federation and leader in the Zambia Home-Based Care Alliance who has provided home-based care for over half of her lifetime shares how her commitment has inspired others in her community to act and join her in calling for the government to recognize their work.   Two caregivers from the International Women’s Communication Center in Nigeria share how their experience receiving care while they were sick and bedridden inspired them to provide care for others also infected by HIV.   In Uganda, a caregiver from the Slum Women in Development shares her inspiration to take action in order for women in her community to have a strong voice to stand up against discrimination and to seek support from the government.  The newsletter also includes updates on global advocacy and news including caregivers from Uganda and Guatemala bringing the experiences of caregivers to the United Nations High Level Meeting on AIDS in New York City and the appointment of Violet Shivutse, a caregiver from Kenya, to the Global Coalition on Women and AIDS steering committee.

We welcome and encourage anyone who receives this to print and distribute widely to caregivers you are working with and to share electronically with your networks.

Read the Home-Based Care Alliance Newsletter here.

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Uganda Ministry of Health Recognizes the Need for Remunerations to Home Based Care Givers

17 Friday Sep 2010

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grassroots women, HIV/AIDS, home based care, Home Based Care Alliance, home based caregivers, ucobac, Uganda, Uganda ministry of health

Uganda Community Based Association for Child Welfare recently dialogued with the Uganda Ministry of Health. Below is an update from Alice Kayongo.

I was thrilled when I read the summary of your radio interview on our AIDS work. It clearly communicated our need and desire. I believe it is a huge motivation to our grassroots care givers in the sense that they will be able to see and know that the struggle for recognition of HBC work by grassroots women still continues at international, national and local levels. We need not to give up until a time when we shall have a breakthrough.

I can report that in Uganda, the Ministry of Health has appreciated the work that care givers are contributing towards the HIV/AIDS response. HBC givers are now being recognized and recently, at a meeting of policy makers and implementors within the Ministry, formal ways of recognition agreed upon included;

a) linking HBC givers to social services such as microfinance institutes so they may be able to access loans, linking them to national agricultural advisory services and other social services.

b) training and providing certificates to home based care givers and other community volunteers.

c) provision of bicycles.

d) formal recognition during community meetings and at health facilities where they refer patients.

The most sensitive aspect of this meeting was the agreement on remuneration of HBC givers and other community volunteers. In as much as the entire team at the meeting agreed that there is a high need for remuneration of these actors as a way of increasing their motivation and retention, the most difficult part was on sustainability of this initiative.

As you may already know, Uganda has established a Village Health Team (VHT) strategy (a network of community volunteers established in Uganda to facilitate health promotion and prevention, service delivery, community participation and empowerment in access to and utilization of health services) which is supposed to be operational in all villages. We have lobbied at national level that HBC givers in a given location be made part of the VHTs. Now that the Ministry is aware and cognizant of our desire, we have to move down to do the same at district and community levels (where final decision on selection of VHTs is made) in order for this idea to be widely and seriously accepted. Each VHT must be comprised of 10 people and there are over 1,000 villages in the country. And in addition to these, there are other existing community volunteers not necessarily part of the VHT strategy but are also doing a lot regarding health promotion and prevention and therefore need to be remunerated as well.

As such, the issue of remuneration was recognized but put on halt for some time until a clear strategy on how to implement it is put in place together with sources of funding. — we will keep following this up irrespective of the resources needed to do so.

We shall share the summary from your interview with HBCA focal persons in their next meeting that will bring together UCOBAC and NACWOLA caregivers as they share their experiences and lessons from the recently concluded IAC.

I thank you so much and commend you for the interview you made on behalf of all caregivers world wide especially grassroots women caregivers.

Alice Kanyongo-Uganda Community Based Association for Child Welfare (UCOBAC)

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♣ Tags

AIDS Ato Getnet care and support caregivers compensation for contributions COWLHA DFID Ethiopia Global Fund global fund on aids grassroots women GROOTS groots kenya GROOTS Zimbabwe HBC service HIV HIV/AIDS HIV Care and Support: A roadmap to universal access by 2015 home based care Home Based Care Alliance home based caregivers Hospice and Palliative Care Association of South Africa Huairou Commission international conference on aids IWCC Jael Amati kenya Mary Joy Medan Acts Nigeria OSSA People's Process PEPFAR SHAFON slum women's initiative for development ucobac Uganda Uganda ministry of health UK Consortium on AIDS and International Development UNAIDS vertical transmission VSO WHO Zambia Zambia Homeless and Poor People’s Federation

Links

  • AIDS Portal
  • Care Givers Action Network Care Givers Action Network
  • Huairou Commission Huairou Commission
  • Stephen Lewis Foundation
  • UNAIDS UNAIDS

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