Orphan Care in Botswana’s Working Households: Growing Responsibilities in the Absence of Adequate Support

Abstract


Objectives. Botswana has one of the world’s highest HIV-prevalence rates and the world’s highest percentages of orphaned children among its population. We assessed the ability of income-earning households in Botswana to adequately care for orphans. Methods. We used data from the Botswana Family Health Needs Study (2002), a sample of 1033 working adults with caregiving responsibilities who used public services, to assess whether households with orphan-care responsibilities encountered financial and other difficulties. Thirty-seven percent of respondents provided orphan care, usually to extended family members. We applied logistic regression models to determine the factors associated with experiencing problems related to orphan caregiving. Results. Nearly half of working households with orphan-care responsibilities reported experiencing financial and other difficulties because of orphan care. Issues of concern included caring for multiple orphans, caring for sick adults and orphans simultaneously, receiving no assistance, and low income. Conclusions. The orphan crisis is impoverishing even working households, where caregivers lack sufficient resources to provide basic needs. Neither the public sector nor communities provide adequate safety nets. International assistance is critical to build capacity within the social welfare infrastructure and to fund community-level activities that support households. Lessons from Botswana’s orphan crisis can provide valuable insights to policymakers throughout sub-Saharan Africa.



Candace M. Miller Sofia Gruskin S.V. Subramanian Divya Rajaraman S. Jody Heymann | source: American Journal of Public Health 172 |
Categories: Care


Other articles

The mental health of children orphaned by AIDS: a review of international and southern African research

This paper reviews research on the mental health and psychological outcomes of children who are orphaned by AIDS. Studies…

Read more

Cash transfer for orphans and vulnerable children as a form of human capital investment in Homa Bay county

The study investigated the role of CT-OVC as a form of human capital investment on the beneficiary OVC living in Homa Bay…

Read more

Nutritional status among orphans and vulnerable children aged 6 to 59 months in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: a community-based cross-sectional study

Background: Childhood undernutrition is a global problem contributing to more than a third of under-five mortality. Orphans…

Read more

Children of A Lesser God? Orphans, Vulnerable Children (OVCs) And Poverty In Zambia: Implications For Social Work Practice

This paper attempts to present a conceptual linkage between a model of intervention of social protection and community practice…

Read more