When Sister Dorcas Atieno, a member of the IVREA Sisters of Macalder Parish-Nyatike, accepted a frail infant from an aging woman at the Macalder Children’s Home, she believed it was simply another routine admission.
Having managed the facility for years, she was no stranger to tragedy, but Baby Charles would prove to be a uniquely heartbreaking case.
Now 12 months old, Baby Charles survived a traumatic birth that claimed the life of his teenage mother.
Though he made it through the delivery, his life has since hung in the balance.
His grandmother, overwhelmed by grief and lacking the means to raise an infant, ultimately entrusted him to the tender care of Sister Dorcas.
The unusual liver
As time passed, Charles was raised on infant formula. However, his health soon took a deeply troubling turn.
“I have handled many children over the years,” Sister Dorcas told Kondele News. “At this tender age, babies occasionally cry and are prone to normal childhood ailments. But his case was entirely different.”
She explained the agonizing symptoms that began to manifest.
“Sometimes his body would grow completely pale, and his stomach would harden as he cried in sheer agony. Our frequent visits to local clinics yielded no fruits.”
During one of their recent medical consultations, a health officer finally detected the underlying anomaly.
“After a careful examination, the officer revealed that Charles has a severely abnormal liver. He discovered that the liver is significantly enlarged and stated that the baby urgently requires the expertise of a specialized pediatrician,” Sister Dorcas said.
Opportunistic diseases and lack of funds
The underlying condition has left the infant highly vulnerable, beyond his hardened, distended belly and emaciated frame, his compromised immune system constantly attracts opportunistic infections.
“He is incredibly susceptible to diseases. He frequently battles malaria, typhoid, and various other infections. His immunity is dangerously low compared to the other children in this facility,” she noted.
The immediate challenge for the Macalder Children’s Home is securing the financial resources required to put Charles in front of a qualified pediatric gastroenterologist who can accurately diagnose the root cause of the hepatomegaly and chart a treatment path.
“To provide daily meals for the children here, we rely entirely on well-wishers and the small piece of land we cultivate,” Sister Dorcas pleaded. “We urgently need financial assistance to help this little angel—first to get a proper diagnosis from experts, and subsequently, to afford his medication.”
