These nuns spent a lifetime helping others. In their last years, who will help them?

Sister Mary Consolata Nakawooja assists an elderly nun as she takes tea at the Little Sisters of St.Francis premises in Nkokonjeru, Uganda.
Stuart Tibaweswa for NPR hide caption Nkokonjeru, Central Uganda — Sister Jane Frances Nakafeero walks purposefully between rows of white crosses adorned with pink and yellow flowers in a cemetery at the Little Sisters of St.Francis convent in Nkokonjeru, Uganda.She pauses, pointing at one of the simple graves.
"This one was a nurse," says Nakafeero.A few steps later.
"This one was a teacher.This one was a social worker.
This one was a doctor."A breeze blows softly between the headstones.Aspiring nuns begin their training in this convent, and novices take their vows before being sent out to serve the community.
Eventually, the same sisters are laid to rest here."The motherhouse," Nakafeero says, referring to her order's founding headquarters, "is where we begin and where we end."The convent also hosts retired nuns, and Nakafeero is increasingly worried about their fate. Sister Jane Francis Nakafeero, superior general of the Little Sisters of St.
Francis, walks with another nun at the cemetery in Nkokonjeru, Uganda, where members of the order are laid to rest.Stuart Tibaweswa for NPR hide caption Palliative care, which provides medical and emotional support to patients at the end of their lives, is a relatively new concept, arising only in the 1960s.
There is little funding for, or knowledge about it, especially in the Church, she explains.The problem of caring for elderly nuns is particularly dire in African orders, which already are underfunded in comparison to American and European ones.At the convent in Nkoknojeru, young nuns look after retired ones, taki...