DEAF AWARENESS

My parents treated my disability with herbs – Ochola

Ochola said there was little awareness about the Deaf but his parents later took him to KNH

In Summary
  • Lack of employment of Journalists with Disabilities in newsrooms and the media, in general, remains one of the biggest barriers in matters of inclusion of Persons with Disabilities.
  • The National Council for Persons with Disability is currently carrying out a sign language training program in partnership with the Kenya Institute of Special Education for government officers, particularly those who are at the customer care desks.
George Ochola awarded certificate of participation in the Disability reporting.
George Ochola awarded certificate of participation in the Disability reporting.
Image: INTERNEWS

Typically, I would need the assistance of a sign language interpreter when interviewing a Deaf person, to facilitate communication between us.

Today, however, I am fortunate to have a conversation without an interpreter while talking to George Ochola, 26, a student at Nairobi Aviation College studying Film Production and Camera Operations.

“I am Deaf but hard of hearing. I can speak but I can’t hear well so I’m using a device that is known as a hearing aid, that is the one helping me to produce the sound,” he says.

According to his parents, George's hearing problem began when he was four.

Because there was little awareness about the Deaf at the time, his parents tried treating him with herbal medicines before taking him to Kenyatta National Hospital, where his doctor recommended the type of hearing aid he could use.

“Today, when you talk, I can hear you clearly because of my hearing aid. Other hearing aids are not as audible and you still struggle to make out what someone is saying,” he says.

When George first began treatment at KNH, his parents would accompany him to his monthly appointments.

That has now reduced to three hospital visits per year with his doctor. He says that the treatment has been costly for him.

For example, he spends approximately Sh25, 000 per visit at KNH.

“If I go for a check-up today and the doctor tells me that my ear has a problem and I will have to go for an operation the following week, then even my NHIF is not enough,” he says of the costly treatment and surgery sessions.

Aside from the costly hospital sessions, George says that using hearing aids is also expensive.

He continues to spend money on it because it allows him to communicate with people who do not understand sign language without an interpreter.

“I use a small battery which costs Sh900 and it takes only a month before I buy another one. So yearly I spend around Sh84,000 for my ear and when I am not using my hearing aid my parents get worried so even my grandmother would sacrifice that money because of communication,” he says.

George is the current Program Assistant at Kenya National Association of the Deaf, an organisation that lobby and advocate for the Deaf and hard of hearing in the country.

He runs programs related to media where he earns a salary that he uses part of to pay his college fees.

“KNAD has lobbied and advocated that the Deaf should not be seen as different people because we the Deaf can do everything that those who are not Deaf do. This has ensured that the Deaf feel comfortable in the environment countrywide,” he says.

George says that awareness of Deaf people and the societies they stay in is very important.

He says this helps in making communication easy without violating the rights of a Deaf person out of ignorance because a Deaf person does not hear no matter how loud one shouts at them.

“For me, I can just see your mouth when you speak but not shout. When you shout you can think that I’m not someone but when we sit facing each other I can lip-read and trust me, we can make a deal,” he says of the speech therapy lessons as one of the best ways to communicate with the Deaf.

George who is a final-year student hopes to practice his journalism career more professionally by focusing on his abilities rather than disabilities by playing his watchdog roles in society.

Earlier this year, he was nominated in cohort 43, Disability Chapter at the Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI) Regional Leadership Centre, based at Kenyatta University and supported by the United States.

He remains optimistic that the new year will grant him opportunities that will help him deliver part of his roles at KNAD which involves improving society when it comes to disability reporting.

For instance, he is looking forward to being accepted into the Mandela Fellowship next year.

Lack of employment of Journalists with Disabilities in newsrooms and the media, in general, remains one of the biggest barriers in matters of inclusion of Persons with Disabilities.

Speaking to journalists during training on disability reporting, Jackie Lidubwi, the Inclusive Media project Lead at Internews said that such a negative attitude which stigmatises and discriminates People with Disabilities needs to change.

“If we have more Journalists with Disabilities in the newsroom, then we are changing the narrative of disability,” Jackie said noting that disability is a human rights issue.

“We need to have all content we are producing accessible to Persons with Disabilities by including sign language interpreters in all programs not only during news, national events and emergency announcements.” 

The National Council for Persons with Disability is currently carrying out a sign language training program in partnership with the Kenya Institute of Special Education for government officers, particularly those who are at the customer care desks.

National Council for Persons with Disabilities Executive Director, Harun Hassan, says that sign language is a national language and training officers in government offices that many people visit frequently like hospitals and police stations is one way of removing communication barriers denying the Deaf from accessing services from government facilities.

“It is not about our impairment it is about barriers that present many of us with different impairments. If the barriers are addressed, there is no disability,” he said adding that the constitution of Kenya puts the rights of Persons with Disability right at the centre.

Whether it is a political right, economic right or social right, all forms of rights are in the Bill of Rights which can only be amended through a referendum; among other rights that we enjoy with other Kenyans.”

Former Nominated Senator Isaac Mwaura speaks to journalist during a training by internews.
Former Nominated Senator Isaac Mwaura speaks to journalist during a training by internews.
Image: INTERNEWS
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