Exploring the Care Relationship between Grandparents/Older Carers and Children Infected with HIV in South-Western Uganda: Implications for Care for Both the Children and Their Older Carers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Theoretical Orientation
2. Methods
2.1. Sampling
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. The Care Relationship
Reciprocal Care Relationship
My grandmother cooks for me tea, food, including vegetables, and if she is not at home, she tells the other children at home to get me vegetables and prepare them. If the food I want to eat is not available at home, my grandmother buys and prepares it for me alone when the others are eating the food that was available.(13 year old girl HIV positive)
I cannot go in the garden before preparing something for him to eat, and we spare something for him from supper for the next morning. Even if it is posho still we spare a piece for him. When he is going to school, I pack something for him to eat. I have sugarcane here and if we are still busy with household work, I tell him to get a piece of sugarcane; I don’t want him to feel hungry. At the clinic I was told that the child had to eat something at any time he liked.(64 year female older carer of HIV positive child)
There are no disadvantages being cared for by an older carer but it is just that my grandmother who would care for me keeps on falling sick and so I take care of her until she recovers and she also does the same.(13 year old girl HIV positive)
I am growing old now...Although he has not yet reached that stage of buying me those items, he is the one who fetches water for me now using a bicycle and our well is far from here.(56 year female older carer of HIV positive child)
…he (the child) is the one taking care of me because he fetches the water, brings the feeds for the animals and cooks the food that we eat.(60 year female older carer of HIV positive child)
There is a Kiganda (tribal) proverb which says: “better try than never.” Me I take him (HIV positive child) as a cassava stem; it grows wherever you throw it, and in future you can find yourself getting food from it. I am just looking after him (HIV positive child). You never know, God can help and I start gaining from him. When you are a parent, you have hope in your children.(56 year female older carer of HIV positive child)
Every person looks after a child hoping that if the child grows up, he or she might help…when the old person becomes helpless. When they grow up, they have to help me (older person)…Do you think we shall be able to cook food for ourselves in future? We are suffering from different types of illnesses and that is why we have educated this young generation so that they will help us in future. The only worry we have is that what shall we do when they grow up and leave our home? I know God will provide means for us.(70 year older carer of child with unknown HIV status).
3.2. Caregiving Challenges
3.2.2. Poverty and Reliance on Cultivation-Based Livelihoods
I hire a piece of land where we can dig. We first get somewhere to work and get money, which helps to hire another place in turn. Then we can grow maize, beans and potatoes. We also work in the village and get money for commodities like soap, paraffin and other things. When you (interviewer) came I was going somewhere to work. The children do not have anybody else to help them…(60 year female older carer of HIV positive child)
(As a result of drought) getting food is not that easy because maize flour is expensive; so we take porridge (thin maize flour paste) for lunch and make posho (thick maize flour paste) for supper. When we make posho, it is not enough and the boy who is on ART wants more food. He needs a lot of food. I have a big family and so I cannot make posho for two meals each day. There must be enough food for him every day because if he takes three days without enough food, he gets dizzy all the time. That medicine needs a lot of eating and sometimes I get a piece of posho from my share and add it to his. Every time he is looking for something to eat, and so it is a very difficult drug.(60 year female older carer of 13 year HIV positive boy)
Poverty is the greatest challenge that I have, at times I feel like buying him fish but there is no money. They advised us to feed them properly, what I do is to look for greens so that I feed him on them. Because I stay on the roadside, the fishermen pass by here every day, you see him expressing a desire for fish yet I do not have money to buy it. You cannot buy one for him only, you have to buy for the whole family. At times sugar gets finished and I find myself in a miserable situation where I have nothing I can do.(64 year female older carer of HIV positive child)
You can also examine the situation at our home, we are living in a poor life, we do not have enough food, and so whatever little food I get is what we eat. It is not that I buy things which are special for her; I do not have that money. When I am going very early to work, I just tell her to prepare some tea for herself even if we do not have sugar, because they told her not to take the drugs on an empty stomach.(60 year female older carer of 15 year HIV positive girl)
Here at my home each child works for themselves and they support themselves. …Mostly he (HIV positive child) fetches water for other people who pay him 150 to 200 shillings a day, after fetching like five jerry cans. At times when he goes to school with that money he spends it on eats. If you look at his shoes, they are torn and he very much needs shoes.(60 year male older carer of HIV positive boy)
My health status is not bad except this food scarcity which is disturbing us. When you go in the village to look for money and you can’t buy food from the money you get only to buy home essentials. So you have to eat what you get, the money I get is not enough for both food and my home essentials. And you can’t rely on casual labouring only, you have to work at home.(54 year female older carer of child with unknown HIV status)
3.2.3. Inadequate Support from Family Members and Other Sources
Before I got that (HIV positive) child, we sat in meeting as a family and relatives. It was decided by all to follow his mother’s will that I should keep the child and they would be helping me to meet the needs of the child, but none of them responds.(56 year female older carer of HIV positive child)
I asked her (the child) which other relatives can take care of her and she responded that her relatives are there but cannot take care of her because her father died when she was three months and her mother brought her up until 2006 when she was taken by the organization that is taking care of her. She added that their livelihood and the number of children they have cannot enable them take care of her.(Excerpt from detailed summary of interview with 15 year old HIV positive girl)
He (the child) told me that he would like to get sufficient support because his father does not support him enough. For instance, “when I go to my father to ask for something I want to eat, he tells me that is not what I want. And in most cases, it is his wife who says that do not give it to him,” he said. His father got another wife and they stay together across the road and it is basically this other wife who mistreats him. When he goes to ask for scholastic materials from his father, he tells him to go back promising to send them but he does not do so. When he asks for school fees of twenty thousand shillings in total, he sends him only ten thousand shillings or five thousand shillings only. He did not pay for his fees the whole of the previous term. He told me he also lacks beddings.(Excerpt from detailed summary of interview with 13 year old HIV positive boy).
I very much like these children to be educated but I do not have money. I pray to God to see that at least they reach a certain stage. The girl wants to be educated but her father has no responsibility for her.(54 year female carer of child with unknown HIV status)
In this community of ours, there are no people who have ever come providing support to us, we are always supporting ourselves. I do not even think I can get anything different because of being an old person.(64 year female older carer of HIV positive child)
There is nowhere in the area where assistance is given to me as a carer of an HIV positive child. The government even promised to assist older people but has never done so.(88 year female older carer of HIV positive child)
I have never heard about organisations that offer support here, and there is no one who can help you. Unless someone is your relative and he or she gives you something but there is no other support you can get from anywhere else. Some time back, they came here and registered us, telling us that they were going to offer us mosquito nets but we haven’t yet got them. Another time they called us, the old people, and we went to the trading centre, we waited for the people who were going to register us to get the support for the whole day and they didn’t turn up. Now I have decided not to go back again even if they come.(70 year female older carer of child with unknown HIV status)
3.2.4. Tense Relationships
I used to advise her (HIV positive child) to behave well but she would not buy my advice and at last she got infected with HIV. She used to move away without my consent and would stay there for some time before coming back home. Whenever I blamed her, she would abuse me and given my age, I just left her for fear that she might attack me and beat me.(60 year older carer of HIV positive girl)
The care is not bad but one of the older child gives me a hard time when she comes back late in the evening from school. When I ask her why she becomes annoyed and puts on a tough face.(56 year female older carer of child with unknown HIV status)
I do not quarrel with grandmother like I do with my grandfather (carer) who barks at me whenever I am washing utensils, saying that I should stop. Maybe he wants me to leave the utensils there and the flies fly all over them. Grandmother does not bark at me; she does not quarrel or abuse me.(13 year old girl HIV positive)
From digging, we are expected to fetch water and relocate cows from one grazing place to another, which sometimes we fail to accomplish because we are tired….(13 year old girl HIV positive)
Then when we get to school late as a result of these (competing) domestic chores, we are also beaten. The teachers just tell us that we should not explain anything regarding the late coming; they beat us and do not repeat for us what we have missed. This happens all the days.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Rutakumwa, R.; Zalwango, F.; Richards, E.; Seeley, J. Exploring the Care Relationship between Grandparents/Older Carers and Children Infected with HIV in South-Western Uganda: Implications for Care for Both the Children and Their Older Carers. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2015, 12, 2120-2134. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph120202120
Rutakumwa R, Zalwango F, Richards E, Seeley J. Exploring the Care Relationship between Grandparents/Older Carers and Children Infected with HIV in South-Western Uganda: Implications for Care for Both the Children and Their Older Carers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2015; 12(2):2120-2134. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph120202120
Chicago/Turabian StyleRutakumwa, Rwamahe, Flavia Zalwango, Esther Richards, and Janet Seeley. 2015. "Exploring the Care Relationship between Grandparents/Older Carers and Children Infected with HIV in South-Western Uganda: Implications for Care for Both the Children and Their Older Carers" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 12, no. 2: 2120-2134. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph120202120
APA StyleRutakumwa, R., Zalwango, F., Richards, E., & Seeley, J. (2015). Exploring the Care Relationship between Grandparents/Older Carers and Children Infected with HIV in South-Western Uganda: Implications for Care for Both the Children and Their Older Carers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 12(2), 2120-2134. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph120202120