Media development action with informed and engaged societies
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Ghana SportHealth

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In December 2001, a delegation of athletes travelled to Ghana to kick off Ghana's SportHealth programme and a campaign to immunise the nation's infants against five deadly diseases with one new vaccine. The campaign was launched at the Sport and Immunization Festival, whose purpose was to highlight the fact that children's right to play cannot be exercised without good health. Originally launched by an organisation called "Olympic Aid" (renamed "Right to Play"), implementing partners include the Expanded Programme for Immunization (EPI), Ghana Education Service (GES) through the Greater Accra Sports Coordinators (GASC), Catholic Action for Street Children (CAS), and the Accra Teacher Training College (ATTC).
Communication Strategies

Ghanian children attending the festival in Accra participated in football matches, cultural dance and games, and handball and tennis. Olympic triple-gold medallist Marion Jones led track-and-field coaching workshops for the children; athlete ambassadors including equestrian Princess Haya of Jordan, American figure skater Dorothy Hamill, and African footballer-of-the-year Roger Milla emphasised the importance of both teamwork and health. In addition, 3,000 infants were immunised.

Interpersonal training to build capacity for sharing information about children's health is a key part of this effort. For instance, adults over the age of 20 years from the GASCs were trained, as were student teachers at the ATTC, Girl Guides, youth from the Teshie Orphanage, and CAS leaders in the Greater Accra Region.

The Right to Play SportHealth programme will continue in Ghana for three years. Coach/volunteers from the United States and Canada are living in Accra and working to disseminate health education messages about childhood immunisation, HIV/AIDS prevention, and physical fitness through sport and play. They are also establishing the first phase of Right to Play's Coach2Coach Program for the refugee community of Krisan-Sanzule, Ghana. The team held its first Play Day on September 22 2001, with a total of 136 children in attendance. Fifteen adults from the community volunteered their services

Development Issues

Immunisation & Vaccines, Health, HIV/AIDS, Children, Rights.

Key Points

Right to Play (formerly, Olympic Aid) is an athlete-driven humanitarian non-profit organisation using sport and play to enhance child development and build community capacity. It firmly supports the right of children to play, as recognised in the 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child (Article 31).

The Ghanaian Minister of Health, Kwaku Afriyie, and the Minister of Youth and Sports, Edward Osei Kwaku, also participated in the Sport and Immunization Festival, as did representatives from international organisations including the World Health Organization and UNICEF. These organisations are members of the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizations (GAVI), which works in partnership with The Vaccine Fund to ensure that all children have access to life-saving vaccines. Right to Play and The Vaccine Fund have worked together to implement similar programmes in other countries; click here for details.

Partners

Right to Play, The Vaccine Fund, Expanded Programme for Immunization (EPI), Ghana Education Service (GES) through the Greater Accra Sports Coordinators (GASC), Catholic Action for Street Children (CAS), and the Accra Teacher Training College (ATTC).

Sources

Ghana SportHealth page on the Right to Play website; and email from Samantha McDonald to The Communication Initiative on February 6 2006.