I love to write. You have probably noticed that by now. As to whether I 
write well or not, get my point across or not, effect change with my 
write-ups or not, is for you my audience to decide. I decided that since
 there was a power outage during the day, with my planned meetings 
having been scuttled, I would spend my night writing. So it was that I 
opened MS word, poised to write, yet all I could type was ‘A’. 
So I took a break. I spoke to a couple of loved ones on phone, trekked 
to Adenta station to print some documents and buy one or two items. I 
returned still not sure what to write. I sat in front of the TV, and a 
movie I had watched some time back was showing. It took my cousin to 
remind me of the title, LIKE STARS ON EARTH! Then there was a discussion
 on why Ghanaian movies can’t portray conditions like Malaria too. I 
thought Malaria was too well known to sustain a full length quality 
movie. 
Then the idea came to me. I realized then what I should write 
about.
It was a Thursday. I had made my way to Adenta Station as usual to board
 my trotro bus (not that I owned one). I took a seat on the front row 
and as usual avoided the window seat right behind the driver because the
 sun’s rays shining directly on me usually made me sweat, one thing that
 could spoil my morning very easily. Next to me was a mother with her 
daughter. This child who looked like she was around 5 years was held in 
her mother’s arms quite tightly. Not that she was sleeping or feeling 
sleepy. Even in that position, she was very agitated and restless. 
Knowing how uncomfortable mothers can become when they realize their 
children are a source of discomfort, I ignored the kicks I received from
 this little girl struggling to break free. Intermittently, she would 
reach for her mother’s dress around her ‘chest’, just as a hungry 6 
month old does when he/she wants breastmilk. Yet this girl was far too 
old for that. 
Along the way, we picked up a lady. She sat in the front seat. Judging 
by how neat her abundant natural hair was kept, a lot of time and effort 
must have gone into keeping it. So imagine then how this lady reacted 
when the little girl reached for her hair. 
It was Neuro Clinic day. I sat in one of two consulting rooms dedicated 
to our special patients. (Of course can’t possibly sit in two, duh!)  
From nowhere, bumped a girl into my room. I turned around to see which 
patient had strayed. Wow! It was her! The same girl who kicked me in the
 car. The same girl who held  another passenger’s hair. The same girl 
who was restrained by her mother throughout the journey. It was the same
 agitated girl. I inquired. Of course I was curious. I was told she had 
ADHD. If you are looking forward to expatiation on this topic, sorry to 
disappoint. Please help yourself to it. 
She was not the only one that day with that condition. In fact there was
 a girl whose ADHD was even more serious. She ran around the consulting 
room all that while. Any intervention to keep her still elicited a 
temper tantrum- she fell to the ground, crawled around and cried. She 
picked a pen and asked for a paper. Did she even write anything? She 
burst her balloon and seized another child’s. She ran to her mother and 
back. Her mother was obviously worried. Yet how on earth were we who are
 supposed to know and understand her condition going to be 
unaccommodating? Admittedly though, due to her destructive powers, I 
started feeling uneasy.
Multiply these two children seen one morning by 100 and we get 200 kids 
with this condition. ( wish I had data on Ghana). 
There is a child in 
class caned everyday because he probably has this condition which leaves
 him hyperactive and unable to stay put in class. Such a child will be 
caned all the time in class for mutiny. At home such a child will be 
branded as a rascal and disobedient, etc. 
Then next time you or I are tempted to brand someone  and punish them 
for being their natural selves, please think ADHD first.
It has been 24 hours now since I started writing. Initially I was short 
of writing material, yet now I am overflowing with ideas. Where did they
 come from? 
Well, watched another movie that moved me emotionally- FRONT
 OF THE CLASS! It was also about a health condition- Tourette syndrome. 
All throughout the movie, my mind wandered back to my time as a teacher 
in a basic school after SHS. I was the friendly teacher who wanted to 
impart knowledge to all. I rewarded and punished. I tried to stay away 
from the latter much. Yet there was this one intellectually challenged 
child who just couldn’t get it. I tried hard, yet he still just couldn’t 
get it. I became frustrated. I started caning him, sometimes out of my 
own frustration. I look back today and wonder if he had a real health 
concern. And there are many reasons medically for intellectual handicap. 
Rewind even further. The year was 2000 or 2001. I was in either class 6 
or form one. I usually taught my younger brother and his friend. They 
were, if I remember rightly in class one. I knew my brother was sharp 
from his class performance, but he just would not outperform his 
colleague during our lessons. I tried to get him to concentrate and 
learn to spell his name rightly in addition to accomplishing other class
 appropriate tasks, but his friend was mostly a step ahead. That too was
 frustrating. I became impatient and frustrated. I thought he was slow 
and not as intellectually capable. I told him off. Today he is an 
electrical engineering student in his first year of study. Watching him 
grow, we all knew his hyperactivity and dexterity will come in useful 
one day, obviously that was years later after my tutorials ended. 
I have my own story to tell. I didn’t have a clean bill of health 
growing up. I had issues. I still do, though. I always knew there was 
something wrong, but neither I nor the doctors could figure it out. 
It was a requirement that all first year students find out their 
sickling status. I did. On the request from it was written- SICKLING 
POSITIVE! Even before I could submit it to the doctor for review, my 
curiousity wouldn’t let me sleep in peace. I thought I now knew why I 
had those health issues growing up. I knew very little about sickle cell
 disease, but I knew enough to start worrying. I got so worried that I 
searched our library extensively for information. I saw one useful book 
on the subject written by Prof. Ahulu. I can’t remember the title 
though.  I read and read and read. I got worried knowing all that. I 
checked for life expectancy and if I remember rightly, the oldest 
patient known to have the disease was Nigerian in his 70s or so. 
These 
were tough times. These were the first few weeks in school.
I remember calling home and asking my parents about their statuses. In 
my mind, they were to blame for my plight.
Review date came and I submitted the report. I was now asked to do an Hb
 electrophoresis. It was at this point that I realized that I was AS. 
Then I knew what ignorance had led me into. 
Fast forward to this very day, and I know there are many who don’t know 
their sickling genotype. Many of those who do are health professionals. 
It is they who constantly are reminded about the difficulties children 
with sickle cell disease go through. It is they who see the frustration 
and regret parents who care for such children silently express. Others 
simply don’t care. They leave the decision to God. If He has taken care 
of generations before us who didn’t know their statuses, won’t He do 
same for us? Well I am a realist. I know that ignorance sometimes is our
 way of escaping responsibility, but just you wait till you are tested. 
I know an enlightened father, who before he married his wife got tested.
 He was AS. So he knew he couldn’t marry another AS based on the chance 
that they could bear children with the disease. His wife got tested and 
was declared AC. The lab technician who conducted the test told him that
 once she wasn’t AS, they could get married with no issues. So the two 
love birds got married. Their daughter fell sick very often and went 
from hospital to hospital. She was treated for malaria most of the time 
only to fall sick after a short while. It was during one such hospital 
attendance that she was tested. She was found to be SC. Imagine the 
shock and anger her father expressed on hearing such news. Even the 
laboratory man who advised had erred to the extent that a lifelong 
consequence was being felt. He intimated that he wouldn’t have married 
his wife if he knew. He said he would have the other child tested. He 
even suggested  divorce! Where did all the love go? 
I have many other such experiences. Even personal once exist. But those 
should be for another day.
What I have tried to highlight are: knowledge should abound. All should 
be informed about the various health issues that exist, which though may
 not be as obvious or prevalent as malaria and pneumonia, can either be 
prevented or managed to ensure that people don’t unduly suffer, for, 
for lack of knowledge, people perish. Also the information should be 
properly packaged for widespread consumption. And as I have sought to 
highlight, movies are a very useful medium. After knowledge becomes 
widespread, individuals should make informed choices however hard in the
 interest of those unborn, regardless of religious inclinations or the 
strength of the love bond shared, for as I have come to see, the 
emotional and financial cost involved in caring for children with 
special needs can weigh down  and wear out whatever love there ever was. 
Finally, can’t we have a national policy which ensures that all students
 entering SHS should be tested and know their statuses before admission.
 This would precede the time when boys and girls start taking 
decisions with lifelong consequences. Education should be intensified. A
 foundation can be set up to fund research and educational campaigns. 
Movies should be acted. Documentaries should be made. All these in a bid
 to promote awareness and render this morbid threat extinct.
By Gubli Natogmah 

1 comment:
Awesome article....this sickling issue is really worrying...
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