Orphans as a window on the AIDS epidemic in sub-saharan Africa: Initial results and implications of a study in Uganda

Abstract


Provisional estimates from a Save the Children Fund enumeration study in four Ugandan districts indicate that the total number of orphans (one or both parents missing) ranges between 620,000 and 1,200,000. Needs assessments with guardians and local administrators show that although extended family networks are absorbing these children according to traditional rules, they may be vulnerable to increased mortality due to economic and health stresses on their caretakers, many of whom are elderly persons. The orphan burden will increase in Uganda and other Sub-Saharan African countries over the next few years. Allocation of additional national and international resources must be considered to avert breakdowns in community and familial support systems and consequent increases in under 5 mortality. The orphan burden is a window on the potential for massive social breakdown and dislocation in Sub-Saharan Africa resulting from high AIDS-related mortality. Methodologies for data collection and planning that use indigenous political systems must be built quickly to avert disaster.



Susan S. Hunter | source: Social Science & Medicine 295 |
Categories: Care


Other articles

A study of environmental stimulation: An orphanage preschool project.

In this major study of the effects of preschool education on child behavior the four authors have had the courage to see…

Read more

Protecting rights of orphan and vulnerable children: no substitute for community action in Nyanza, Kenya Get access Arrow

This article focuses on the plight of orphans of HIV and AIDS victims and other vulnerable children in the Nyanza Province…

Read more

Education and Nutritional Status of Orphans and Children of Hiv–Infected Parents in Kenya

We examined whether orphaned and fostered children and children of HIV–infected parents are disadvantaged in schooling,…

Read more

Orphans, Converts, and Prostitutes: Social Consequences of War and Persecution in the Ottoman Empire, 1914–1923

Considerable research has been conducted on the relationship between the First World War and the persecutions of Ottoman…

Read more