| Literature DB >> 30135916 |
Tonderai W Shumba1, Indres Moodley1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study explores some of the experiences of national programme managers, heads of national organisations of persons with disabilities (OPDs) and persons with disabilities in the implementation of the disability policies and legal framework in Namibia.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30135916 PMCID: PMC6093090 DOI: 10.4102/sajp.v74i1.400
Source DB: PubMed Journal: S Afr J Physiother ISSN: 0379-6175
FIGURE 1Community Based Rehabilitation matrix.
Participants’ characteristics.
| Participant ID | Gender | Organisation | Job title | Disability experience |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | Female | Ministry of Health and Social Services – national level | Acting deputy director – Division Disability Prevention and Rehabilitation | > 15 years |
| P2 | Female | Ministry of Health and Social Services – national level | Former acting CEO, currently senior health programme officer | > 15 years |
| P3 | Male | Ministry of Health and Social Services – Windhoek Central Hospital | Chief prosthesis/orthotics | > 10 years |
| P4 | Female | Ministry of Health and Social Services – national level | Senior health programme officer (National Programme Manager – Mental Health Services) | > 15 years |
| P5 | Female | Ministry of Education – national level | Chief education officer | > 10 years |
| P6 | Male | Ministry of Justice | Chief legal interpreter | > 15 years |
| P7 | Male | Ministry of Poverty Reduction and Social Welfare | Acting deputy director and former National Disability Council member | > 10 years |
| P8 | Male | National Disability Council | Acting deputy director and former National Disability Council member | > 15 years |
| P9 | Male | National Federation of Persons with Disabilities (NFPDN) | Chairperson of Executive Board NFPDN and MOHSS staff | > 15 years |
| P10 | Male | Person with disability | Representative of persons with disability and former secretary general of NFPDN | > 15 years |
| P11 | Male | Volunteer to National Organisations of Persons with Disabilities | Disability consultant and Former Peace Corp volunteer | > 15 years |
| P12 | Female | Office of the Vice President – Disability Affairs | Minister – politician | > 15 years |
| P13 | Female | Ministry of Health and Social Services – Intermediate Hospital Katutura | Occupational therapist | > 10 years |
| P14 | Male | Ministry of Health and Social Services – Intermediate Hospital Katutura | Physiotherapist | > 10 years |
| P15 | Male | National Federation of the Visually Impaired (NFVI) | Human rights and advocacy officer | > 10 years |
| P16 | Male | Namibia National Association of the Deaf (NNAD) | Chairperson of NNAD and school teacher for the deaf | > 10 years |
| P17 | Female | Ministry of Health and Social Services – national level | Chief health programme officer (orthopaedic technical services) | > 15 years |
| P18 | Female | The Association for Children with Language, Speech and Hearing Impairments of Namibia | Director | > 15 years |
| P19 | Female | Ministry of Education – Centre for Communication and Deaf Studies | Chief education officer | > 15 years |
| P20 | Male | Albino Trust of Namibia | Chairperson of Albino Trust and member of National Disability Council | > 15 years |
| P21 | Female | Ministry of Justice and Organisation of National Association of Children with Disabilities (NACD) | Language interpreter (Ministry of Justice), chairperson of NACD | > 15 years |
MOHSS, Ministry of Health and Social Services.
Disability programmes and services in Namibia.
| Organisation | Disability programmes in place |
|---|---|
| Ministry of Health and Social Services | Community Based Rehabilitation Institution-based rehabilitation (physiotherapy, occupational therapy, medical rehabilitation and audiology) Visual impairment rehabilitation Mental health Blindness and deafness prevention Orthopaedic technical services |
| Ministry of Education – national level | Special education (visual impairment, hearing impairment, and intellectual and learning disability) Inclusive education (hearing and visual impairment) |
| Ministry of Education – Centre for Communication and Deaf Studies | Namibia sign language training Strengthening educational institutions of the deaf Advisory and consulting services of the deaf Research and development of the issues of the deaf Provision of sign language interpreters |
| Ministry of Justice | No disability-specific programme but are responsible for drafting and interpreting policies and legislation including for disability |
| Ministry of Poverty Eradication and Social Welfare | Disability grant disbursement under the |
| National Disability Council | Disability awareness in communities Implementation of national policy on disability Entrepreneurship training programme (Memorandum of understanding [MOU] with National University of Science and Technology) |
| National Federation of Persons with Disabilities in Namibia (NFPDN) | Disability awareness in communities Advocacy for human rights of persons with disabilities |
| National Federation of the Visually Impaired (NFVI) | Community Based Rehabilitation Mobility training and orientation Computer training Entrepreneurship training Activities of daily living Braille reading and writing Basic English reading and writing Counselling |
| Namibia National Association of the Deaf | Deaf awareness (HIV and AIDS, disability grants) Sign language training Development of sign language documents (dictionaries) Human rights advocacy (education, Namibian sign language as an indigenous language of the deaf) |
| The Association for Children with Language, Speech and Hearing Impairments of Namibia | Screening of hearing Provision of hearing aids Language stimulation Parent counselling |
| Office of the Vice President – Disability Affairs | Database of persons with disabilities Mainstreaming of persons with disabilities Economic upliftment of persons with disabilities, support to organisations of persons with disabilities (OPDs) Disability empowerment programmes Disability resource centres |
| Albino Trust | Advocacy on disability grants Disability awareness Access to education |
Awareness on existence of disability-related policy and legislation in Namibia.
| Policy/legislation | Number of participants who were aware | Percentage (%) of awareness |
|---|---|---|
| National Policy on Disability | 21 | 100 |
| United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities | 17 | 81 |
| 15 | 71 | |
| Sector Policy on Inclusive Education | 14 | 67 |
| National Policy for Mental Health | 8 | 38 |
| National Policy on Orthopaedic Technical Services | 7 | 33 |
Key theme 1: Health services.
| Subtheme | Subcategory/code | Participant(s) responses |
|---|---|---|
| Access to rehabilitation services | Coordination | ‘The national level is not capacitated to coordinate physiotherapy, occupational therapy and medical rehabilitation services. There is only one person at national level at the moment to manage all these services.’ (P14) |
| Finance | ‘National Disability Council has not been functional for years due to very low budget allocation … and not able to consult widely with persons with disabilities.’ (P8) | |
| Staff shortage | ‘Most of the occupational therapists in this country are foreigners mostly from southern Africa who work on contracts. Namibia does not have courses for training rehabilitation professionals.’ (P13) | |
| Lack of skills | ‘The orthopaedic technical services send staff for training from certificate to Masters level in different categories. Most of our posts are now filled and we are wondering what we will do with the ones that are under training now.’ (P3) | |
| Access to assistive devices | Finance | ‘ … we just provide basic assistive devices to our clients. Budgets for orthopaedic technical services have been going down since 2012 from N$20 million, to only N$1 million in 2017.’ (P3) |
| Supply chain | ‘The tender process says that companies should be 100% Namibian owned. There are no manufacturers of orthopaedic devices in Namibia. We have middle men who put low prices during tender bidding and when asked to supply they fail.’ (P17) | |
| CBR programme | ‘CBR is driven by volunteers who assist in identifying and referring persons in need of assistive devices … this has been helping in remote areas.’ (P1) | |
| Access to medical care | Mental health | ‘We only have two centres in the country providing mental health treatments, Oshakati Hospital and Windhoek Central Hospital … all patients are sent to these centres which are always full and not having space.’ (P4) |
| Lack of Braille and sign language | ‘We cannot read prescriptions. We don’t know whether this is Panadol or paracetamol because the prescriptions are not in Braille. We don’t have privacy to our medication.’ (P9) | |
| Signage for persons with visual impairment | ‘Namibian health institutions don’t have directions for visually impaired to follow. You can come to the hospital or clinic and unless you are used to move around there, you need assistance to be taken to different services.’ (P9) | |
| Medical fees | ‘We have a circular within the MOHSS which exempts persons with disabilities … the challenge is in some areas the administrators choose not to follow it and make them pay.’ (P2) | |
| Health promotion and prevention | Awareness campaigns | ‘…we have spearheaded the National Disability Day and International Day on Persons with Disabilities in collaboration with other line ministries … the Council has a budget for awareness raising every year … health promotion is part of the activities.’ (P8) |
| HIV/AIDS and sexual reproduction education | ‘Our policies don’t address issues of HIV/AIDs and disabilities.’ (P19) |
CBR, community based rehabilitation.
Key theme 2: Education.
| Subtheme | Subcategory/code | Participant(s) responses |
|---|---|---|
| Early childhood development (ECD) | Few facilities for ECD | ‘CLASH manages the only kindergarten for children with hearing impairments in this country, only enrolling a maximum of 10 children per year … The government should open more of these kindergartens countrywide with the high demand.’ (P18) |
| Stigmatisation | ‘We have challenges in preschools whereby parents of the so called “normal children” want to remove their child if they see that the preschool has enrolled a child with disability.’ (P21) | |
| Success of ECD (political will, occupational therapy assessments, support from non-governmental organisations and the private sector) | ‘ … now the situation of ECD is much better. Most of the preschools have been taken over by government and the government is advocating for free education.’ (P5) | |
| Primary and secondary education | Medium of communication | ‘Although the school setting acknowledges Namibia sign language as a medium of teaching in schools, it is still not recognized as the FIRST language of the Deaf.’ (P16) |
| Premature launch of sector policy on inclusive education | ‘ … no educational support materials for the inclusive education. I feel we prematurely launched the policy without looking closely at the budget and resources needed.’ (P9) | |
| Collaboration | ‘ … our services [ | |
| Success of sector policy on inclusive education (free education, sign language training, appointment of class assistants for the deaf and advocacy by organisations of persons with disabilities [OPDs]) | ‘ … the government has done well with providing free education for primary and secondary education … class assistants have been appointed to assist deaf students.’ (P12) | |
| Higher education and vocational training | Limited vocational training courses | ‘ … this education system supports boys mostly. Most of the trades at vocational training centres are for boys with disabilities. You only find hair dressing and sewing for girls.’ (P21) |
| Reasonable accommodation (sign language, Braille, large print and physical accessibility) | ‘I [ | |
| Assessments of examinations | ‘ … most persons with disabilities spend lot of years up to 6 years in vocational training. They just give a reason that we don’t know how to assess them with examinations … some end up dropping without being examined.’ (P21) |
Key theme 3: Livelihood.
| Subtheme | Subcategory/code | Participant(s) responses |
|---|---|---|
| Social protection | Success of disability grant | ‘ … I must say the political will is there to provide disability grants. … Recently the government even increased the amount of disability grant from N$500 to N$1100. Namibia is amongst very few African countries that provide disability grants.’ (P12) |
| Inconsistency in disability grant assessments | ‘Doctors support applications for disability grants of some persons but not others. For example, with Albinism, you can go to this doctor they refuse and when you go to the other you can get support….’ (P20) | |
| Abuse of disability grants | ‘ … some children don’t even know they are receiving a disability grant. Government should put a monitoring system to see that the needs of the child are met once the grant is paid out every month.’ (P21) | |
| Employment (wage and self-employment) | Lack of education | ‘ … persons with disabilities who have not benefitted from formal education struggle to compete in mainstream employment.’ (P11) |
| Lack of reasonable accommodation | ‘Reasonable accommodation is important … I know of a friend with visual impairment who graduated with a teaching degree and is still unemployed. She was asked by the Ministry of Education to bring her own assistant then share the salary.’ (P15) | |
| Skills development | Loss of mandate owing to changing ministries | ‘Our national policy advocates for sheltered employment and there was one called Ehafo in Windhoek. However, Ehafo which was under Ministry of Lands moved to the Ministry of Education, everything stopped … it lost its mandate.’ (P2) |
| Lack of reasonable accommodation | ‘ … most of our VTCs are not accessible for the deaf and the hearing impaired.’ (P5) | |
| Success of skills development | ‘ … The National Disability Council has an entrepreneurship programme through an MOU with National University of Science and Technology which started in 2014 … they have trained 28 persons in business, computer science, marketing, English and accounting.’ (P8) |
VTC, vocational training centres.
Key theme 4: Social.
| Subtheme | Subcategory/code | Participant(s) responses |
|---|---|---|
| Personal assistance | Lack of policy provision | ‘ … the question is who needs a personal assistant? … This is not clear in the policy.’ (P12) |
| Assistance of persons with multiple disabilities | ‘ … we also need to look at personal assistance for those with serious disabilities. If we have funds from the National Disability Council, we could take care of their needs more adequately.’ (P8) | |
| Access to justice | Provision of evidence in court | ‘ … in courts, most of the evidence is visual … you are told to touch your suspect when they know you cannot see. The legal system should provide other ways to assist visually impaired to provide evidence in court.’ (P6) |
| Physical accessibility in courts | ‘ … we had a case of a man on wheelchair who was in the gallery … could not see or be seen by the magistrate during the court case. Our court rooms are not accessible to persons on wheelchair.’ (P21) | |
| Inaccessibility to information | ‘Both the | |
| Success of accessibility to information | ‘When local language court interpreters have court cases for the deaf, we usually call a sign language interpreter.’ (P6) |
Key theme 5: Empowerment.
| Subtheme | Subcategory/code | Participant(s) responses |
|---|---|---|
| Advocacy and communication | Disability desk in offices/ministries/agencies | ‘As OPDs, we lobbied vigorously to have an office at the highest office in the country. We first had the Disability Unit in the Office of the Prime Minister and in 2015, our President created a Disability Office in the Presidency. We have also lobbied for disability desks in some ministries.’ (P9) |
| Training of politicians on UNCRPD | ‘… we (NFVI) have trained parliamentarians, councilors, mayors to understand the UNCRPD and how they can apply it in Namibia. We are focusing only on Article 5, 9, 24 and 27.’ (P15) | |
| Organisations of persons with disabilities (OPDs) | Declining donor support | ‘OPDs have been always supported by donors. Now donors are pulling out because Namibia is considered a middle-income country, and we are struggling. The remaining donors ask for high requirements for their grants that most OPDs don’t have.’ (P9) |
| Financing of OPDs | ‘ … our national policy needs review to accommodate the financial needs of OPDs.’ (P7) | |
| Lack of skills | ‘ … we have few people with essential credentials to lead the charge. Coupled by persons with disabilities not having benefitted from formal education, they bring less to the table in driving disability programmes.’ (P11) | |
| Political participation | Representation in parliament and government | ‘ … the president appointed one person with disability as an MP in 2005. The same person is now a deputy minister in the Office of the Vice President responsible for Disability Affairs.’ (P10) |
| Participation in national elections | ‘We (visually impaired) have been able to vote in the last elections using digital voting.’ (P9) |
UNCRPD, United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.