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Armenia: Debate Swirls Over How To Care For Disabled Babies

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  • Armenia: Debate Swirls Over How To Care For Disabled Babies

    ARMENIA: DEBATE SWIRLS OVER HOW TO CARE FOR DISABLED BABIES

    EurasiaNet.org
    March 2 2015

    March 2, 2015 - 1:30pm, by Gayane Abrahamyan

    Leo Forrest is just over a month old, but already has become a potent
    symbol of the struggles and discrimination that disabled children
    endure in Armenia. Whether his story can catalyze changes in public
    attitudes, however, remains unclear.

    Baby Leo was diagnosed at birth with Down syndrome. As the US
    television network ABC reported earlier this month, doctors urged
    Leo's Armenian mother, Ruzanna Badalian, to give him to an orphanage.

    She agreed. His father did not.

    "The issue lies in the society, where parents have dogmatic ideas
    of their children-to-be," Leo's father, New Zealander Samuel Forrest
    commented in an interview with EurasiaNet.org in the Armenian capital,
    Yerevan. "They imagine the perfect child, and when the newborn does
    not match that mental image, they might abandon" the baby.

    Data from the Ministry of Healthcare and the Ministry of Labor
    and Social Affairs indicates that about 45 children are born with
    Down syndrome in Armenia each year; 22 of these children were given
    to orphanages in 2014. "Families often tend to hide their disabled
    children, keep them locked in, and the main reason is indirect public
    pressure," said Harutyun Balasanian, director of Armenia's oldest
    state-run orphanage for disabled children, located in the village of
    Nor Kharberd, 30 kilometers south of Yerevan.

    One 2012 UNICEF survey of 6,042 disabled children, parents and social
    workers reported that many of these children may never leave their
    homes; still more may never leave the facilities that house them.

    Lena Hayrapetian, head of the Labor and Social Affairs Ministry's
    Department of Family and Children, believes that while public attitudes
    toward the disabled are a significant factor in discrimination,
    the real problem lies with Armenia's lack of infrastructure for the
    disabled. "In our country, it is rather challenging to raise a child
    with special needs, which require additional care, expenses," noted
    Hayrapetian. Annual per capita income in Armenia amounts to just $6,300
    a year. To assist with expenses, the government gives families with
    a disabled child monthly assistance of 23,000-30,000 drams (about
    $50-$70). "There are few daycare centers, no community centers."

    In this child-centric culture, parents do not "give up right away."

    Not all of the 86 disabled children who were committed to orphanages
    in 2014 were infants, she added. The government claims that only 13
    percent of the 8,000 Armenian children registered with disabilities
    live in orphanages.

    Some Armenian advocates for disabled children's rights contend
    that medical professionals are a big part of the dilemma. "When you
    return home with the child after giving birth, a pediatrician from a
    [state-run] polyclinic comes to visit, and asks, 'aren't you giving
    it away to an orphanage?'" said Varduhi Aramian, the director of a
    non-governmental advocacy group called Armenian Camp. Aramian's own
    17-year-old son suffers from a musculoskeletal disorder.

    "Pity is offered, rather than support or encouragement," she said of
    doctors, relatives and neighbors. "At every step, you are expected
    to either give up your child, or it will die."

    Leo's father, who has filed for divorce from his wife since their
    son's January 21 birth, told a similar story. "The doctor told us we
    had the choice of rejecting him," said Forrest, who does not speak
    Armenian. In an open letter published earlier this month, Leo's mother
    described the choice as "the hardest decision of my life to be made
    within a matter of a few hours."

    The Margaryan Medical Center, which handled the delivery, denied a
    request to interview the physician responsible for Leo's care.

    Other doctors say that in such situations they simply explain to
    parents the problems that the child will face. Frustrated by the
    controversy, a senior healthcare ministry official conceded that
    "doctors should have explained the issue, informed [the parents]
    about the consequences, but should have left the parents to make an
    independent decision."

    "I doubt they were given time to think it over," said Karine
    Saribekian, head of the ministry's Maternity and Childcare Department.

    Arshak Jerjerian, the deputy director of the Republican Institute
    of Reproductive Health, Perinatology and Gynecology, emphasized that
    "the decision is always made by parents; never by doctors."

    "The issue is that parents making that decision are always trying
    to find other reasons to justify their decision," said Jerierian,
    who claimed to know Leo's medical personnel well. He characterized
    them as impeccable professionals.

    It is "the medical personnel's attitude that misguides parents into
    abandoning their children with birth defects," contended Balasanian,
    who has worked with special-needs children for 20 years.

    Disabled Armenian children raised by their families experience plenty
    of hardship. The 2012 UNICEF survey found that 77 percent of the 55
    parents surveyed said that their child did not receive rehabilitation
    therapy. Forty-eight percent of the mentally challenged and 56 percent
    of the hearing impaired children surveyed did not attend school at
    all. Twelve percent claimed they had no friends.

    Meanwhile, experts claim progress has been achieved over the past
    decade; Armenia is starting to break with Soviet-era traditions,
    under which individuals with physical or mental challenges should be
    kept apart and out-of-view.

    In 117 Armenian public schools -- roughly 8 percent of the overall
    total - special-needs children now are placed in general classrooms.

    Despite objections from some parents and teachers, UNICEF Educational
    Project Manager Mary Poghosian believes the policy is having a
    beneficial effect. In one recent UNICEF survey, yet to be published,
    most respondents termed "unacceptable" the idea of committing disabled
    children to an orphanage, she claimed.

    "Attitudes change when people can see [disabled children] next to them,
    in the same classroom with them," Poghosian commented.

    For now, the Armenian parents of other disabled children, like Leo,
    can only hope that such change will continue.

    Editor's note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a freelance reporter and editor
    in Yerevan.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/72351

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