| Literature DB >> 22518183 |
Theresa A McElroy1, Stella Atim, Charles P Larson, Robert W Armstrong.
Abstract
Research from numerous fields of science has documented the critical importance of nurturing environments in shaping young children's future health and development. We studied the environments of early childhood (birth to 3 years) during postconflict, postdisplacement transition in northern Uganda. The aim was to better understand perceived needs and risks in order to recommend targeted policy and interventions. Methods. Applied ethnography (interview, focus group discussion, case study, observational methods, document review) in 3 sites over 1 year. Results. Transition was a prolonged and deeply challenging phase for families. Young children were exposed to a myriad of risk factors. Participants recognized risks as potential barriers to positive long-term life outcomes for children and society but circumstances generally rendered them unable to make substantive changes. Conclusions. Support structures were inadequate to protect the health and development of children during the transitional period placing infants and young children at risk. Specific policy and practice guidelines are required that focus on protecting hard-to-reach, vulnerable, children during what can be prolonged and extremely difficult periods of transition.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22518183 PMCID: PMC3299273 DOI: 10.1155/2012/820290
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr ISSN: 1687-9740
Description of research sites.
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| Pabo camp had been one of the largest and most overcrowded camps during the war. Numerous emergency relief organizations had built up infrastructure in the area. As such, it was a relatively well-resourced and accessible site located on a main road with two health centres, schools from nursery to secondary, markets, and other resources. The majority of participants from this site were residents of the Pabo camp and/or were in early phases of resettlement planning their return or moving back and forth between camp and villages. Half of the caregiver participants became case studies and those who resettled were followed back to their villages of resettlement in the subcounty. |
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| Site was very remote, difficult to access, and underresourced. The team travelled by car, motorbike, and hiking on foot. All but one of the water points in the camp were broken, the nearest health centre was approximately 11 km away and it was only open during weekday daytime hours, the road was badly rutted with potholes filled with mud and water, and the primary school was a mud and grass-thatched structure built and supported by the community. Participants were either from the Omee II decongestion/transition camp (small camp established later in the war to move people closer to their land for subsistence and to decongest larger camps) or the surrounding villages. The majority of participants were either actively in the process of resettlement (moving back and forth to camp) or had recently resettled. |
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| Accessibility and resources/services were variable; that is, villages closer to the main centres tended to have access to health care, education, and water points whereas those farther away from the centres were more like the Omee II with very limited or inaccessible resources. The third site consisted of 8 parishes (villages and camps) in the Anaka subcounty in order to capture people who had been resettled for varying durations and reach saturation on emerging themes. |
Demographics of participants.
| Leaders | Primary female caregivers | Fathers | Elders | Sibling caregivers | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age range | 20 to 68 years | 16 to 72 years (included grandmothers caring for orphans) | 22 to 64 years | 42 to 92 years | 4 to 15 years |
| Sex | 28 male | — | — | 8 male | 6 male |
| Highest level of education achieved | No formal education to graduate level training | 18 no formal education | 23 primary | 15 none | 5 none (some too young) |
| Livelihood | Leadership positions described above and/or farming (particularly for LCs and traditional leaders) | Farming either in own land or for others for food or money and/or small-scale trade/ business | Farmers | Farming, small business, receiving aid, or supported by family |
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| Marital status |
| 23 married or living together | All married or living together | 10 married |
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| Number of children range |
| 1 to 8 children | 3 to 14 (including biological and orphans) | 4 to 11 including biological and orphans | Most caring for 1 to 2 charges |
| Current residence |
| 14 in camp | 10 in camp | 8 in camp | 14 in camp |
Examples of questions guiding interviews and focus groups.
| Postwar living arrangements | |
| (i) If still in the camp, explain why?: | |
| Tell me about the impact of remaining in the camp for your children: | |
| (ii) If in the village, tell me about your return to the village: | |
| Tell me about the impact of returning to the village for your children: | |
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| Current service environment | |
| (i) Describe the services that are currently available for young children: | |
| (ii) Who are the existing or potential leaders who are (or could) address the needs of young children in your community? | |
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| Nutrition | |
| (i) Describe what you should feed [NAME]: | |
| (ii) Is there anything that makes it difficult or stops you from feeding [NAME] these foods? (probe: environment factors, social factors, number of times issue is experienced) | |
| (iii) Is there anything that helps you feed [NAME] these foods? | |
| (iv) Describe what happens when you cannot feed her/him the foods you describe: | |
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| Health | |
| (i) Describe what [NAME] needs to be healthy: | |
| (ii) Describe a safe and happy environment for a young child: | |
| (iii) In the last two weeks has [NAME] been ill? (Probe illness and treatment.) | |
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| Caretaking practices | |
| (i) Who spends the most time with young children? (Probe who takes care when caregiver is away or busy.) | |
| (ii) How are young children supervised? | |
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| Developmental stimulation | |
| (i) Describe what children learn in the (1st, 2nd, 3rd year of life-ask according to age): | |
| (ii) How do they learn each of the skills you mentioned? | |
| (iii) What does play look like for a child this age? (Probes: whom do they play with? Show me what he/she plays with.) | |
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| Questions about young children in war and displacement | |
| (i) Describe what was different about raising young children before war when people lived in their villages: | |
| (ii) Did this change during war? (describe) | |
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| Risks/barriers and enhancers/facilitators | |
| (i) What is bad for young children? (i.e., what could prevent them from being as successful as possible?) | |
| (ii) What should be done to make sure [NAME] and all young children have the chance to become successful adults? | |
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| Future outcomes: | |
| (i) What do you want for [NAME]'s future? (Probes: valued outcomes, measures of success, desirable character traits.) | |