Abstract

In 1989, Article 24 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) stipulated good quality healthcare, the best healthcare possible, as a human right for every child. This qualitative study in Uganda examined children’s awareness of and access to timely, quality healthcare as part of a broader study examining whether institutions established for children in Africa are raising awareness about children’s rights amongst children and engaging with children in decision-making and planning. To establish whether children possessed knowledge of their rights and could inform decisions at a community level. Using action research approaches, the team conducted focus group discussions (FGD), drawing, key informant interviews(KII), dialogue meetings (DM), and observations in one village in a rural and another in aperi-urban district, with 72 participants (21 children aged 10–15 and 51 adult stakeholders at community, district and national levels). Children were aware of their right to quality health services. In FGDs and drawing, children described their dissatisfaction with and difficulties in accessing healthcare services. These were confirmed with the adult stakeholders in the KIIs and DMs, the DMs also including children who presented their FGD results to community stakeholders. The findings suggested a lack of clear guidelines in schools or health facilities to support children needing medical attention. There was limited stakeholder capacity to involve children meaningfully in programme plans and decisions directly affecting them. Recommendations included the development of explicit policies with specific strong linkages between educational, health and other service institutions to promote, protect and respect children’s rights and also training to elicit children’s perspectives in decisions that affect them.

Highlights

  • Article 24 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC), 1998 stipulates good quality healthcare, the best healthcare possible, as a human right for every child

  • The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) reports reveal that most children do not have access to health services and their health situation is still poor (Government of Uganda [GOU] 2013)

  • Qualitative methods used in the study included focus group discussions (FGD), key informant interviews (KII), and dialogue meetings (DM)

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Summary

Introduction

Article 24 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC), 1998 stipulates good quality healthcare, the best healthcare possible, as a human right for every child. The persistence of preventable deaths, child hunger and malnutrition, lack of access to health care services, low school completion rates, and declining educational quality in the region continue to prove obstacles for improving children’s well-being (Government of Uganda [GOU] 2013 b; Government of Uganda [GOU] 2012). The UNICEF report observed that every disadvantaged child bears witness to a moral offense by the state’s failure to secure her or his rights to survive, thrive and participate in society (UNICEF 2012; 2013a). This is true for most children in African countries. Poor sanitation coupled with unsafe water sources contributed to the disease http://www.aejonline.org doi:10.4102/aej.v3i2.155

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