Saturday, 29 January 2011

A busy week

This has been another busy week.

We visited Dr Badoe who is a paeditrician and very supportive of the training work of Cerebral Palsy Africa. He sees many children with different disabilities but says that the majority have cerebral palsy. One of the causes he notices is untreacted jaundice in newborn babies. He has been working for the last 2 years to start a child abuse centre. Finally all is ready to help children who are abused. Sadly this includes disabled children.

We have been working on items for the Hospitals
Jean started to make a ride on donkey requested for use at one of the hospitals


Anna painted the tro-tro walker


Richard varnished it (amongst lots of other work) and
we all delivered the tro-tro walker to the hospital

......


Then on the 28th January 2011 The Venash-N Enterprise
Appropriate Paper-based Technology (APT) workshop was opened
Veronica Hansen- Nortey and her husband


Visitors, including 2 reporters and someone from the Pink radio station crowded in after the prayers, singing and the ribbon was cut
The special cake

A friend made a special cake - there were ribbons everywhere - great celebration


Tools and patterns hanging ready for action. Thanks Jane for helping make the patterns - they are really appreciated.


Veronica with a chair she has made - see removable footrest


Anna in the 'porch' of the container with Veronica's son and family friend


Mandy (who helped start and inclusive school in Accra calledMulti Kids) talking with Veronica. She says she knows how hard it is to get a new project going in Ghana and thinks Veronica and family have done so well

One of the children who comes to Multi Kids is going to have a new chair support.
The footstool is just fine -
thanks to Alan Balcombe and Richard Simmonds from the UK Paper Furniture Social Enterprise - Monday group.
Monica, who works at the school, did the CPA Apt course in 2009 and she is going to make him a seat support - the one in the photo has an intergral foot rest and is too short but they want to keep it as a model.

Ghana is a great place for making furniture from Cardboard - loads of imports, cement comes in strong brown bags - great for final covering of tiems and newspapers are used - unlikely that people will all read online for some time considering the difficulties in staying online.

Sunday, 23 January 2011

Follow-up training day

The two Mums who are making APT chairs and standing frames for sale.
A follow-up training day for them.

It is important that work is documented. We went over record-keeping (they seemed a bit dubious about this) and then gave them their cameras from CPA to help (really pleased about this!)

Using the wooden giraffe that Richard is making to decide on how high from the floor we should have a ride-on horse. The reason J and Jean are paying no attention to the camera is because they're looking for a tape-measure

J's sister and Anna being artistic

The painted tro-tro


J able to sit alone with some help from Anna's first APT item
- the painted chair
It is too small for J who has long legs but it worked well on the chair jammed up to the table with his feet hanging

Thursday, 20 January 2011

Training in Uganda - January 2011

The first CPA training course is currently being run in Uganda. Hocepa (Hope for Cerebral Palsy in Uganda) is a parents organization and they requested and have arranged the training.

Renate has been running the first part of the course on the physiotherapy side and helping participants know how to handle and help the child at home.

The Ugandan participants
They are now doing APT training with Joy helping
They will make items for their children and help others with children needing chairs in their homes - a new group of APTers/ Paper Furniture Makers

Making boards


Joy demonstrating the strength of rolled pieces of paper especially when the grains are in the direction to hold up a book over a gap.

Wednesday, 19 January 2011

A few days away from Accra

The beautiful cape Coast with the dreadful history - it was awful enough just to see the places where people were held before being shipped off to be slaves
Never again








Seeing the equipment made in 2009!





Richard helping hold the feet while Joana shows her skills - she leant a lot from a CPA course and wants to do her Masters on the topic.







The classroom for children with cerebral palsy, named in honour of Gloria Godfrey who worked towards this and worked hard to help Veronica, Dorinda and Eddie Doyle (VSO carpentry teacher) run a course on the Assistive Cardboard Equipment in Cape Coast. It was held in the School for the Deaf in the end of 2009 and resulted in all the chairs and standing frames being made.

Friday, 14 January 2011

More visits and more APT

Making an insert for a wheel chair - also useful for use on an ordinary kitchen chair. A suggestion from Renate (physiotherapist) so Joy is taking one to Uganda for on Sunday 16th Jan and we thought it would be very useful here.

Every day we are making as well as visiting.
Richard making a ramp for tilting a chair - please not the use of tights kindly donated by Margaret and the WI!

People are very active in Accra
Real Tro-tros - always busy in Accra
Dorinda and Anna with tro-tro walker (wheels in the bag - still need adjustment)

At Korle Bu, the main teaching Hospital in Accra there is a new Paediatric Physiotherapy Unit - very smart and parents bring children every weekday. We spent a morning observing and playing with the children
One little boy had played a lot and fell asleep
There are lots of children needing chairs and standing frames. Sandra, the physiotherapist requested we help with a chair for this child. We are going work on making one with Dorinda
Please note the Paper Furniture box made by Libby- Sandra loves it and wants another!
Just in case anyone is wondering - it is not all work
Lots of wonderful fruit !

Tuesday, 11 January 2011

Back in Ghana

After 2 years CPA equipment people are back in Ghana. The 3 of us went to Pigs Farm, bus/tro-tro place, and met up with Veronica, one of the participants on the Cerebral Palsy Africas's 2009 APT course. We went to her house and saw her daughter who has cerebral palsy.

Veronica and Jean walking along path into Veronica's back yard


Veronica showed us how well A is doing in the cardboard standing frame she has made

Richard(from Hampshire) and Anna(from Australia) with A - the house is very small and packed with items including Veronica's APT work

After a lot of chat about her work making chairs and standing frames for Annet and other children over the last 2 years, we went to see the new development that is to help with the space problem Walking from the house to the new container bought with the help of MOSS (Move On - Seed Support), a small Christian charity helping people who have a specific need where a small grant will make a difference to helping them move on in life and useful enterprise

Veronica's newly acquired workshop for helping children with disabilities in Accra, is being beautifully prepared for action. So much work has been done to get it ready. Concrete slabs, are on one side and the back for some extra work space and also on the front. Then she has caged in the front so it all locks safely. Inside the container is lined with cardboard sheets on walls and ceiling. The cardboard lined walls and ceiling lightening the inside of the container



Well what else could a true enthusiast use?!


Veronica, delighted to have a space to increase the good work!














Saturday, 1 January 2011

More on Burkina Faso APT training

CONGRATULATIONS to all the new APT people in Burkina Faso

Back row from right to left: Paul, assistant administrative, Souleymane, orthopedic technician, Prosperer: Animator Radio president du Cassed, org. for street children and orphans, Aïcha, Policice activity assistant in the prison of 39 women deliquents, Bakari, Psychologist, Aurore French volunteer speechtherapist and psychomotrienne, Mothers of children of Fitima, Cécile French volunteer, OT. mother

Second row on Marain's right hand is: Jean Louis, PT assistant, and on her left hand and further are all mothers. In the front is Arcen Patient of Fitima, decorator.


Making a cardboard insert including foot support
This is useful for a kitchen chair and a wheelchair too
Strengthening the insert

A different insert for giving pelvic, back and foot support using an available chair


Making a bench
A child-friendly chair

Decorating the ramp

Busy painting

The useful and colourful results!