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With your support we can help girls in Nepal break free from the cycle of sickness and poverty writes Cathy Ratcliff

- Dr Cathy Ratcliff is chief executive of the charity EMMS Internatio­nal

Amidst the current pandemic, government­s are fighting to balance the protection of public health with other priorities, particular­ly access to education.

However, long before the coronaviru­s pandemic, poor health was already keeping thousands of children from the classroom, especially girls.

Chronic sickness in rural Nepal causes unnecessar­y pain and suffering, due to lack of access to healthcare and pain relief. It also places a huge burden of care on girls.

Girls like Sunita, who left school after both her mother and father became ill and were unable to care for themselves.

Without the support of a strong healthcare system, her father’s cancer diagnosis meant a poor prognosis for Sunita’s hopes of an education.

Her family did what they could to manage but Sunita fell behind in class and eventually had to drop out of school altogether.

In Nepal, an estimated 120,000 people need palliative care, but such care doesn’t extend much beyond urban population­s even though 80 per cent of people live in rural areas. The result is a mounting burden of care on younger generation­s, putting their education and hopes for the future in jeopardy.

Access to quality care and essential medicine at or close to home stops families from having to choose between healthcare today and the education of future generation­s.

With the support of Edinburgh charity EMMS Internatio­nal’s Nepalese partner INF, and its Green Pastures Hospital in Pokhara, Sunita’s family has now been receiving the care they need.

Access to quality care relieved the pain of her father’s cancer. But it also lifted the burden of care from Sunita’s young shoulders. Now she is free to return to school when classrooms reopen, safe in the knowledge that her loved ones are being cared for.

With the help of UK government funding, EMMS will soon be working with INF and other local partners in Nepal to bring such support to many more families, and we are calling on the public for your support too. We are asking you to support our campaign and give girls like Sunita a chance to fulfil their aspiration­s by returning to school, safe in the knowledge that her loved ones are receiving the care that they need.

If we raise the money that we aim to, and so earn matched funding from the UK government, then we can bring access to quality palliative care and essential pain relief at or close to home for 20,000 families in rural Nepal. With their loved ones well cared for, 1,646 young carers can return to school and enjoy the hope that education brings for them and their communitie­s.

Sunita is not alone in this situation. Unpaid care is believed to put the education of 22 per cent of Nepal’s youth at risk and with it their opportunit­y to create a more prosperous future for themselves and their families.

This burden of care affects girls disproport­ionately and they are most likely to sacrifice their education to work as unpaid carers. Every girl matters, and access to quality healthcare lifts the burden from girls, restoring their opportunit­y to learn at school, earn money and participat­e fully in society.

At the launch of our Every Girl Matters fundraisin­g appeal, Professor Jason Leitch, national clinical director of the Scottish government, said, “We’ve seen this year how vital quality healthcare is in securing not only our physical well- being but also our ability to go to school, go to work and spend time with our families. Yet this current global pandemic is not the only challenge that we or countries like Nepal face.”

The UK Government’s outgoing developmen­t minister, Baroness Sugg, said: “The benefits of schooling are truly transforma­tive and span generation­s. For every additional year a girl stays in secondary school, she can increase her future earnings by up to 20 per cent. Widening access for education improves their chances of finding a job, escaping child marriage and their ability to choose how many children to have. By educating girls today we can genuinely change the world of tomorrow.”

We’ve all heard the “build back better” mantra, but better means more than resilience in the face of a global pandemic. It means understand­ing barriers that hold girls and other marginalis­ed groups back and will continue to do so post- pandemic unless something changes. Quality healthcare breaks down some of the hidden barriers to education for girls. It helps girls break free from the cycle of sickness and poverty.

Your donation can make this a reality: it can show that every girl matters – £ 32 provides profession­al care at or close to home for a family fighting sickness and poverty. The UK government will double donations to the Every Girl Matters appeal, pound for pound, until 19 February 2021, helping us to reach even more families.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has demonstrat­ed the need for global solidarity time and time again. It has shown that our health and prosperity are inextricab­ly linked with global neighbours near and far. Global cooperatio­n will see us out of this pandemic. It is already giving us the promise of a vaccine. Let’s all build on that cooperatio­n and tackle the structural inequaliti­es that hold girls back. Let’s show that every girl matters.

You can support the Every Girl Matters appeal by visiting www. emms. org/ everygirl or calling 0131 313 3828 ( in office hours). EMMS Internatio­nal is an Edinburghb­ased Christian healthcare charity working in Nepal, Malawi and North India to bring access to quality, dignified healthcare.

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