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128 More voices from Ukraine 2

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Manage episode 326398840 series 26644
Content provided by David Niven: Social Work Expert. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by David Niven: Social Work Expert or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Raisa Kravchenko adds to more voices from Ukraine. She was, until very recently, Executive Director, Board Chair and co-founder in 2004 of the All Ukrainian NGO Coalition for Persons with Intellectual Disabilities. It is a network of 118 Ukrainian local non-governmental organizations and agencies for persons with intellectual disabilities representing about 14 thousand families from all the regions of Ukraine. https://www.facebook.com/vgocoalition,https://www.prosto-pro.com.ua/, www.inteldisabilities-coalition.com.ua Since 2020 the NGO Coalition is a the member of Inclusion Europe ( https://www.inclusion-europe.eu/about-us/#members )

Raisa is one of the foremost campaigners and recognised authorities in this field. She still heads her local. regional group and, with a disability herself,supports her adult son who has learning difficulties. Obtaining prescribed medication is increasingly difficult e.g. Raisa’s district of 200,000 people had 12 prescribing psychiatrists. Now there are 2 and, understandibly, those in poverty cannot look to buy elsewhere if that is even possible. With the disruption of the Pandemic and now the war, services that were already limited are at breaking point.

Ukraine, until recently, addressed the needs of those with intellectual disability with a medical model, supported by the efforts of the voluntary sector. Psychiatric assessments and medication were the norm. Day care and respite provision was mainly up to families. Personal assistants were found and engaged at cost to families, especially hard for those in poverty.

Currently, a lot of Ukrainian families taking care of a person with ID had left Ukraine for Europe as war refugees and talk of the warmth, care and support from the partner NGOs, the Governments of European countries and all European people.

The coalition states that quite a lot of families stay at home whatever the situation in their localities due to peculiar condition and perception of their loved one with intellectual and behavior disabilities. Also, the mothers (main care providers) survive significant burn out and have physical diagnoses more often than average people everywhere in the world. And they also can not stand the complicated trip. Persons with autism could hardly stand an abrupt change of their place of residence and people around, and their families also stay home in spite of bombing and hardships. In any case, the care giver has to dedicate all her/his time to care as all the supporting community based services stopped. It is estimated that 45% of all those diagnosed with ID have a dual diagnosis of behavioural problems making care even more difficult.

Totally, over 261 thousand Ukrainians are awarded official disability status due to a psychiatric diagnosis. Naturally, all day centers are closed, all community based services stopped. Care institutions for above 30 thousand Ukrainians with intellectual and psychosocial disabilities try their best to continue care and both national and local authorities support their specific war needs. But it’s just not nearly enough.

Before the war NGO members provided community based services and self-help peer support to all their members with a minimum support from the public funds which is not available now due to the onset of war.

There is some support from Inclusion Europe but much more is needed as displacement, dislocation and fear drive through communities and greatly increase existing risk to very vulnerable people and their carers.

There is much need fro financial help and the following are the assessed target areas for support.

  1. Donations to the NGO Coalition Bank account in Euro for the individual aid to families taking care of a person with ID – the Tax Code of Ukraine permits to provide without tax a donation of 3470 UAH per year per person. ( about £90 or $120 )
  2. Professional services of the Social Worker for the family of persons with ID to get access to the general humanitarian aid programs as well as the individual work aimed at meeting urgent needs caused by the war (e.g., health emergency, broken flats by bombs, gitting prescriptions for the psychiatric medicines, etc). Expected cost to cover 20-30 families is 900 Euro per month including taxation and travel costs.
  3. Support to families through financing of personal assistant wherever the family is. The average cost for individual assiatant for one person with ID according to individual needs is 500 Euro per month including taxation. Some mothers can not leave the adult or child autistic son and daughter for more than 1 hour to purchase food, medication or stand in line at the bank machine, so, personal assistance is a basic need.

Following the war these are estimated needs:-

Rehabilitation with the separate programs for persons with intellectual / behavioral problems, care givers, care staff.

Restart of the service provisions to Ukrainians with ID by NGOs (we would appreciate highly the crisis donation of 15000 euro per NGO)

Initiation of the supported living program for those Ukrainians with ID who lost care because of the war (whose care givers are perished, became disabled, homes ruined etc).

Bank details: Euro account: UA203052990000026005010114058, SWIFT PBANUA2X. Code 26521104

I hope to bring more voices from Ukraine in the near future.

____________________________________________________________________________________

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The post 128 More voices from Ukraine 2 appeared first on Thoughts On The Social World.

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166 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 326398840 series 26644
Content provided by David Niven: Social Work Expert. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by David Niven: Social Work Expert or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Raisa Kravchenko adds to more voices from Ukraine. She was, until very recently, Executive Director, Board Chair and co-founder in 2004 of the All Ukrainian NGO Coalition for Persons with Intellectual Disabilities. It is a network of 118 Ukrainian local non-governmental organizations and agencies for persons with intellectual disabilities representing about 14 thousand families from all the regions of Ukraine. https://www.facebook.com/vgocoalition,https://www.prosto-pro.com.ua/, www.inteldisabilities-coalition.com.ua Since 2020 the NGO Coalition is a the member of Inclusion Europe ( https://www.inclusion-europe.eu/about-us/#members )

Raisa is one of the foremost campaigners and recognised authorities in this field. She still heads her local. regional group and, with a disability herself,supports her adult son who has learning difficulties. Obtaining prescribed medication is increasingly difficult e.g. Raisa’s district of 200,000 people had 12 prescribing psychiatrists. Now there are 2 and, understandibly, those in poverty cannot look to buy elsewhere if that is even possible. With the disruption of the Pandemic and now the war, services that were already limited are at breaking point.

Ukraine, until recently, addressed the needs of those with intellectual disability with a medical model, supported by the efforts of the voluntary sector. Psychiatric assessments and medication were the norm. Day care and respite provision was mainly up to families. Personal assistants were found and engaged at cost to families, especially hard for those in poverty.

Currently, a lot of Ukrainian families taking care of a person with ID had left Ukraine for Europe as war refugees and talk of the warmth, care and support from the partner NGOs, the Governments of European countries and all European people.

The coalition states that quite a lot of families stay at home whatever the situation in their localities due to peculiar condition and perception of their loved one with intellectual and behavior disabilities. Also, the mothers (main care providers) survive significant burn out and have physical diagnoses more often than average people everywhere in the world. And they also can not stand the complicated trip. Persons with autism could hardly stand an abrupt change of their place of residence and people around, and their families also stay home in spite of bombing and hardships. In any case, the care giver has to dedicate all her/his time to care as all the supporting community based services stopped. It is estimated that 45% of all those diagnosed with ID have a dual diagnosis of behavioural problems making care even more difficult.

Totally, over 261 thousand Ukrainians are awarded official disability status due to a psychiatric diagnosis. Naturally, all day centers are closed, all community based services stopped. Care institutions for above 30 thousand Ukrainians with intellectual and psychosocial disabilities try their best to continue care and both national and local authorities support their specific war needs. But it’s just not nearly enough.

Before the war NGO members provided community based services and self-help peer support to all their members with a minimum support from the public funds which is not available now due to the onset of war.

There is some support from Inclusion Europe but much more is needed as displacement, dislocation and fear drive through communities and greatly increase existing risk to very vulnerable people and their carers.

There is much need fro financial help and the following are the assessed target areas for support.

  1. Donations to the NGO Coalition Bank account in Euro for the individual aid to families taking care of a person with ID – the Tax Code of Ukraine permits to provide without tax a donation of 3470 UAH per year per person. ( about £90 or $120 )
  2. Professional services of the Social Worker for the family of persons with ID to get access to the general humanitarian aid programs as well as the individual work aimed at meeting urgent needs caused by the war (e.g., health emergency, broken flats by bombs, gitting prescriptions for the psychiatric medicines, etc). Expected cost to cover 20-30 families is 900 Euro per month including taxation and travel costs.
  3. Support to families through financing of personal assistant wherever the family is. The average cost for individual assiatant for one person with ID according to individual needs is 500 Euro per month including taxation. Some mothers can not leave the adult or child autistic son and daughter for more than 1 hour to purchase food, medication or stand in line at the bank machine, so, personal assistance is a basic need.

Following the war these are estimated needs:-

Rehabilitation with the separate programs for persons with intellectual / behavioral problems, care givers, care staff.

Restart of the service provisions to Ukrainians with ID by NGOs (we would appreciate highly the crisis donation of 15000 euro per NGO)

Initiation of the supported living program for those Ukrainians with ID who lost care because of the war (whose care givers are perished, became disabled, homes ruined etc).

Bank details: Euro account: UA203052990000026005010114058, SWIFT PBANUA2X. Code 26521104

I hope to bring more voices from Ukraine in the near future.

____________________________________________________________________________________

Facebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinby feather

The post 128 More voices from Ukraine 2 appeared first on Thoughts On The Social World.

  continue reading

166 episodes

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