By Lina Paulitsch
On the outskirts of Cape Coast
a village-like camp is home to people suffering from leprosy, forming a
comforting and unprejudiced environment.
Leprosy is a chronic disease that has been existing for more
than 4000 years. Caused by bacteria, it is spread from person to person by
droplets. The disease affects the victim’s skin, mucous membranes and nerve
cells.
When thinking of leprosy, pictures of deformed fingers and
limbs are mostly the first association. However, this horrible extent of the
disease is a myth that has stigmatized its victims in history. As the bacteria
affect the victim’s nerves, he is unable to feel pain, which is why he easily
wounds himself without the urge of getting medical help. Without treatment
these open lesions result in other infections such as tetanus, which,
secondarily, cause body parts to fall off or to become shortened and deformed.
If the wounds are disinfected, there is no danger of such a terrible stage of
leprosy.
All over the world, people with leprosy are still outcasts
and often seen as cursed or bedeviled. The stigma attached to the disease is
also due to the fact that it is contagious. Yet again, this assumption is
folklore: in order to become infected with leprosy, one has to be in long,
physical contact with the infected person, sharing the same bathroom, for
example. But above all, each person’s individual immune system plays the major
part, as only 5 to 10 per cent of humans are able to fall sick with leprosy.
In Western countries leprosy is generally regarded as
exterminated. Still, in 2002 over 763,000 people were infected, mostly living
in emerging and developing countries, such as India,
Brazil, Mozambique and Tanzania. This figure can be
directly linked to the poor hygienic standards that exist in these countries,
such as polluted water, little living space and poor nutrition. Under these
conditions the bacteria can spread far more easily and, additionally, secondary
infections as well. Another reason for leprosy in developing countries is the
lack of medical care. During the last 20 years, over 15 million people could be
entirely cured from leprosy with new antibiotics, which kill the bacteria. However,
people in the Third World still catch it
unnecessarily, as the medication and health care is too expensive. Furthermore,
the stigma keeps them from admitting to the disease.
Bearing all these difficulties in mind, a group of
volunteers in Cape
Coast decided to
effectively help people with leprosy: a few years ago, eight independent
organizations fundraised, set up and built the so-called Leprosy Camp,
consisting of small houses for a few hundred people to live in. The major goal
was to form a place and a community for people with leprosy, where they would
not feel harassed or uncomfortable for their disease. Above all, the volunteers
would take care of their medical needs and supply them with medication and
bandages for free.
Initially built for just people with leprosy, their families
can now live at the camp as well. Over the course of the years, a community has
been established, which is certainly very important to leprosy patients. Inside
the camp, there is no stigma that could make them outcasts of society, as even
the children grow up around it, without being afraid or prejudiced. The
residents of the leprosy camp support and help each other with their daily
lives. As a way of getting profit many people try to sell their own crafts, such
as hats, jewellery or clothes.
One of the community members, who is not a leprosy patient
but takes care of them, is James. Coming from the Western Region, he moved to
the leprosy camp two years ago in order to support his granduncle and stayed in
the house when he passed away. At camp he has been helping treating old people
and orphans, whose parents had lost their lives to the disease or are unable to
take care of them. Sometimes, he also supports the volunteers in explaining
things to them, concerning the camp, people and traditions. “I like the camp,
the people here are very friendly”, James says. His actual profession, though,
is painting: Spread all over his little veranda, there are paintings hanging on
the walls, showing traditionally African sceneries and people. Being his only
financial support, he sells them to the community or people that pass by.
Currently, the NGO ‘Projects Abroad’ is sending two medical
volunteers to Leprosy Camp: Rose Kelly from Australia
and Rebekka Kern from Germany.
Every day one of them comes to the camp and helps the residents with medical treatment.
“We clean the Leprosy patients’ wounds, so they can’t get infected, redress
them and give them antibiotics”, says Rose Kelly in an interview about the
volunteers’ duties. “We also distribute bandages and other supply to people,
who don’t want us to dress their wounds but do it themselves. Also, we help other
people that live in the camp, if they are sick or have any other problems, as
they generally come and ask us about it. We can help with treatment, give out
drugs or take him or her to hospital”
With a bag full of gloves, bandages and gauze the volunteers
walk from one house to another, visiting leprosy patients, who are unable to
walk. For the others, there are benches in front of the camp, where people can
come on their own to receive treatment. Through this close, daily contact the
volunteers have established an emotional connection to their work as well: “We
have a pretty good relationship to the patients - we know about their lives, we
ask how they are going. We also have a really good relationship with the kids, as
they like us very much”, Rose says.
With a community center and Sister Alice from Ireland, who
gives out aids and distributes the money, the camp is fairly well-organized.
Still, there are many things to be improved. “The conditions are pretty good
for the fact that the camp is run and set up by volunteers, but it is
definitely not the cleanest place to dress wounds. To have the ability for
their wounds to get better, it needs to be clean, sterile environment. So, I
think it could be better in terms of cleanliness, but it is also the people
here that have to improve it, saying ‘We need to clean up the rubbish, we need
to clean up the dirt’”, Rose says.
Leprosy is a disease directly connected to poor hygiene and
poverty. But as for this fact, it can be fought and cured, in terms of education,
prevention and financial support. To exterminate leprosy for good, people have
to know everything about it in order to understand its dangers and to dispose
of the stigma still existing in many countries. Secondly, the hygienic
standards have to improve to avoid new infections with leprosy and secondary
diseases. And lastly, medical treatment has to become accessible for everyone
to actively fight leprosy. The Leprosy Camp in Cape Coast
aims to help with all three points and proves to be direct and effective:
volunteers take care of people in need, providing them not only with medical
supply but also with comfort. Institutions as this are an essential step in the
fight against leprosy and their importance for the future cannot be emphasized
enough. If help continues to arrive, the extermination of leprosy will soon be
reality.
Most health problems we are facing today are lifestyle associated, for which one visits to the clinician. In modern practice, a visit to clinician often results in a prescription with some diagnostic test, prophylactic (preventive) pills to attain health. The prescription fulfills the mutual desire that ‘‘something be done’’ Continue reading...
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