Effect of COVID-19 response in Uganda on street children

Cite this article: Pan Africa Medical Journal. 2020;35(2):56. DOI: 10.11604/pamj.supp.2020.35.2.23545 Received: 15 May 2020 Accepted: 28 May 2020 Published: 29 May 2020 Domain: Health promotion,Health Research,Public health

According to the Consortium for Street Children (CSC), street children are defined as those who depend on the street with a substantial link to public places for livelihood and work. This population of children and youths is quite dynamic and exact numbers are difficult to establish [3]. It is, therefore, challenging for governments to plan for them. Each child bears a unique story as to why they decide to depend on the street. However, some common reasons include mistreatment at home-34.6%, poverty-25.7%, and the death of parents and guardians-20.6% [2]. Additionally, UNICEF highlights the widespread urbanization which comes with an inflated cost of living outside the realm of affordability for poor families, forcing children to the streets [4]. Street children were first recorded in Uganda in the early 1970s under the existence of a civil war that produced over 800,000 orphans [2]. Despite the fact that Uganda has grown economically and politically, it does not meet the street children´s welfare owing to a lack of government support in the form of budgetary allocations. In comparison, only 0.5% of the street children in Cameroon report having received some form of government support [5]. They also receive aid from well-wishers and NGO´s for example the recent United Nations distribution of 1200 aid kits for street children in Senegal, a country with more than 30000 street children [6,7]. However, such aid is not sustainable and does not adequately meet their needs. These facts reflect how this demographic is often neglected. Below, we discuss some of the responses where street children in Uganda are delineated during the responses to COVID-19.
First, whereas the rest of the population in homes access information presented in technological devices such as radios, televisions, phones, and the internet, street children do not have these. Their primary source of information is from street workers who are currently not working [8,9]. Some groups have advocated for printing information that these children could read but this is not on the priority agenda. Street children, therefore, remain uninformed and can be a drawback to the efforts against the continuous spread of the virus. Likewise, documented literacy levels among street children show that 25.5% of them do not have formal education and over 70% have at most elementary school education [4]. This observed low literacy levels is another impediment to the interpretation of the little health information they can access. The children are thus left misinformed and relying on rumors and myths and this has been highlighted in other African countries like Kenya and Ghana [9].
Second, due to the characteristics of their lifestyle, street children often reside in meager accommodation in groups, with no access to clean water, food, or sanitation facilities. These children do not like being on the streets as underscored by a recent interview with a street child in Mombasa, Kenya who revealed that he would rather be arrested during this crisis because there is guaranteed food and shelter in prison [7]. But some street children will avoid incarceration during lockdown enforcement and as they avoid being jailed, they also either spread the disease or increase their own risk of morbidity. Additionally, while it is clear that the WHO mitigation strategies such as staying at home and personal distancing and hygiene are crucial for COVID-19 prevention, this is impractical for street children given the harsh realities they face. Another way in which lockdowns due to COVID-19 has affected street children is to deprive them of their income. Their main economic activity is begging and with lockdowns in place, they risk dying of hunger rather than Coronavirus since the people from whom they beg are all under lockdown and off the streets [7].
Lastly, 50% of street children are exposed to violence including sexual violence on the streets [8]. These rough experiences tend to make them insubordinate and hence likely to remain defiant even when advised about possible ways to avoid the virus. According to Cumber [5], 44.9% of these children have lived on the street for only 7-12 months and 88.2% had no contact with their families. However, the current unpalatable conditions on the street during COVID-19 lockdown with nothing to eat may force them to go back to their abusive families from which they escaped. This may expose them to repeated bouts of violence. On the contrary, more children may get on the streets after lockdowns as poverty and orphanage levels increase following the intentional recessions in the economy and deaths of parents from the virus [7]. There have been positive stories of this pandemic having reunited some street children with their families in the neighboring Kenya courtesy of the philanthropic work of a nun [10]. As encouraging as this sound, no amount of philanthropy could save all the numerous street children in Uganda and the rest of the African continent. The responsibility rests with the governments.

Conclusion
Measures against COVID-19 have made drastic changes to global public health. However, they have punctuated the problems of low-and middleincome Sub-Saharan African Countries, Uganda inclusive, with already existing vulnerable populations. The limited literature on street children in Uganda emphasizes a need for their important inclusion in policy and research decisions to preserve their lives and wellbeing. This commentary has found paucity in information and research about street children and further research on this topic would bring more conclusions to the true impact of COVID-19 on street children, and thus better considerations.