|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
People
with disabilities more vulnerable to the cholera epidemic
National
Association of Societies for the Care of the Handicapped (NASCOH)
February 06, 2009
While statistics of people
with disabilities who have succumbed to the cholera pandemic in
Zimbabwe are hard to come by, there is, however, no doubt that this
marginalised and underserved population which, paradoxically, continues
to fall through the cracks of social intervention measures, is the
most vulnerable to the deadly disease, which has reportedly claimed
the lives of over 3000 Zimbabweans and afflicted over 60 000.
Because of the age-old
association between poverty and disability, most people with disabilities
are more likely to live in unsafe environments where the cholera
bacteria thrives; they are less likely to access crucial medical
treatment for the disease because of reasons to do with lack of
mobility and finance; those with upper limb disorders might experience
real problems in performing seemingly simple tasks of boiling, filtering
and chlorination of water which kills the bacteria, thereby halting
transmission; warnings about cholera contamination, including any
such warnings that could be posted around contaminated water sources
and directions on how to decontaminate the water, will have no effect
on visually impaired people, who cannot read them.
In addition, due to an
inability to understand sign language, the majority of Zimbabweans
shy away from communicating with people with hearing impairments,
thus depriving them of much-needed information on the management
of the life-threatening disease, whose prevention is however simple
if proper sanitation practices are followed.
Following these sanitation
practices, however, can prove to be a veritable hurdle for certain
categories of disabilities. For instance, there is need for proper
disposal and treatment of the germ infected focal waste produced
by cholera victims including any clothing and bedding that come
in contact with it. While it is necessary that all materials that
come in contact with cholera patients be sterilised using hot water
or bleaching if possible, people with limited mobility, such as
those in wheelchairs, would not be able to attend to such tasks.
Nor would those with upper limb impairments be able to thoroughly
clean and sterilise their hands after touching a cholera patient
or bedding or clothing that would have been contaminated with cholera.
Michael Muza, a visually
impaired rehabilitation technician at Ruwa National Rehabilitation
Hospital says that lack of information continues to militate against
the inclusion of people with visual impairments in crucial intervention
programmes: 'Information still remains an issue of real concern
for people with visual impairments even when it comes to the cholera
epidemic. Information on the disease is not available to us in disability-friendly
formats like Braille and big print. We do not even know the numbers
of people with disabilities who have died from the disease and this
prevents the public from assessing the real situation concerning
cholera and people with disabilities,' he said.
In addition, the comas
or seizures resulting from hypoglycaemia and fluid loss, and the
effects of such symptoms as abdominal cramps, leg cramps, and incessant
vomiting, there is a risk of compounding disability where it is
already present or even acquiring a disability in the process.
While current efforts
by the local and international community to combat the pandemic
are laudable, there is need for society, including government, civil
society, non governmental organisations, external partners and the
general public, to go the extra mile to ensure the complete inclusion
of people with disabilities in vital social intervention measures,
and in a way that is accommodating of their difference.
Visit
the NASCOH fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|