"Cerebral palsy is the most common cause of physical disability in children worldwide, and yet in most low resource settings there are few services available to support children with cerebral palsy or their families. Research is required to understand the effectiveness of community and/or home based programmes to address this gap. This 2-year study aimed to evaluate a participatory caregiver training programme called ‘Getting to know cerebral palsy’ in Ghana. The training programme consisted of a monthly half-day support group with training, and a home visit, delivered across eight sites in Ghana over 10 months. A total of 76 families and children were included at baseline and 64 families followed up one year later at endline. Children were aged between 18months and 12 years with a mean of 3.8 years and a range of severity of cerebral palsy. Nearly all (97%) the caregivers were female and the father was absent in 51% of families. The study was a pre-post intervention design using mixed methods to evaluate the impact. A baseline and endline quantitative survey was conducted to assess caregiver quality of life (QoL) and knowledge about cerebral palsy and child feeding, health, and nutrition outcomes. Qualitative data was collected to explore the impact and experiences of the training programme in more depth".
et al
Publication Date
January 2017
58 p, ill
View webpage for full text
Keywords
Rehabilitation; community-based rehabilitation; Programme/ Project; programmes and projects; Disability and social diversity; functional limitation: mobility; Disability and community; family & caregivers; Health; systems: health workforce; Cross-cutting; policy; Education; formal education; issues: malnutrition; therapeutic (treatment); Global picture; poverty; children with disabilities; issues: maternal and child health
Regional Focus
Country focus
Language
Type of material
Content type