Teenager overcomes early HIV setback

Mathata (not real name) realised some six months after giving birth to her baby boy that something was awfully wrong with the child. The child was not growing and was as thin as a twig. "I took the baby everywhere.

Some people advised me that he had phogwana (a problem associated with the fontanel), yet others said he had ditantanyane (gripes). I got to a point where I simply got tired of seeking treatment for the child," she says and looks at the boy as he sits reading.

It was at that 11th hour that Oboye Nkele, a peer educator at Baikamogedi Support Group in Moshupa visited her and persuaded her to take her baby for an HIV test. "I remember hearing people talking about this baby that was continually sick and decided to pay the mother a visit. The child had sunken eyes and protruding cheekbones and almost had a hunchback. Looking at the child, you would wonder if it would be alive the following day," Nkele says.

Editor's Comment
Routine child vaccination imperative

The recent Vaccination Day in Motokwe, orchestrated through collaborative efforts between UNICEF, USAID, BRCS, and the Ministry of Health, underscores a commendable stride towards fortifying child health services.The painful reality as reflected by the Ministry of Health's data regarding the decline in routine immunisation coverage since the onset of the pandemic, is a cause for concern.It underscores the urgent need to address the...

Have a Story? Send Us a tip
arrow up