Thursday, January 21, 2010

Neonatal Care in India: Raising a generation by raising awareness

Every seven minutes, a woman in India dies due to pregnancy-related complications. Over a million babies born in the country die within their first month of life. India has the unfortunate distinction of claiming more than a quarter of the total newborn deaths in the world. The majority of these deaths occur in rural areas where poverty and lack of knowledge about proper maternal and child health care are the real cause of these fatalities.

The Indian government has come up with schemes such as the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) and the soon-to-be-launched National Urban Health Mission (NUHM) to address this dire situation. Both schemes give high priority to the issue of maternal and newborn health for marginalized communities, and seek to improve the availability of and access to quality health care for those at the lowest rung of the socio-economic ladder. Additionally, government programs such as the Janani Suraksha Yojana incentivize delivery in hospitals by encouraging mothers to opt for institutional deliveries.

While the government’s efforts are commendable, the complication arises in that people must first be aware of the problem before they can take advantage of the government services addressing it. And unfortunately, in many Indian households, where the basics of survival take center stage, the health of mothers and their newborns is not given much importance.

Effective development communication programs can play a pivotal role in bridging these knowledge gaps by identifying barriers to behavior change, analyzing these barriers, and developing original techniques to overcome them.

AKHA

For instance, in Assam, a collaboration between the Indian government, UNICEF, and local bodies is using a boat called Akha to reach underprivileged indigenous tribes that inhabit geographically isolated sandbars and islands called chaporis. The chapori residents, who live near the lifeline of Assam—the Brahmaputra river, are often cut off from accessing health care facilities due to floods and other natural hazards. What’s more, awareness about maternal and child health care is all but drowned out by the other concerns for survival that face this group.

The Akha Boat

The Akha Boat

The Akha, which comes equipped with medical staff and communications materials, makes visits to these isolated regions with the mission to regularly provide facilities for maternal and child health as well as promote awareness about health-seeking behaviors. Findings suggest that the service delivery undertaken by the boat, which has been continually expanding over the last few years, has dramatically improved thousands of lives. 71 percent of the chapori mothers sought some form of antenatal care during their last pregnancy; of these, 42 percent sought care from the Akha.

This is one example of how an intervention tailored to the specific needs of a community can raise awareness and create tangible change.


Article courtesy: Vikas S from PATH Sure Start.

3 comments:

  1. http://ibnlive.in.com/news/newborn-dies-as-docs-allegedly-cut-off-her-arm/109102-3.html?from=tn

    Wonder if you all saw this in the papers?
    Also, please comment on the article posted above. Scan newspapers and magazines to find what kind of issues have come up about neo-natal health care in India.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It is one such example of providing a basic health care and an awareness relating to or affecting the infant during the first month after births is essentials to meet the pregnancy related complications due to the lack of knowledge. In this manner, finding out the right medium anything could be a(community) radio or a newspaper which can carries messages or awareness extensively would be the right steps ahead for anything could think off.

    Certain messages which need to be stressed on caring the mother and her baby and insisting on the institutional deliveries in the hospital or the health centre which assures of their safeties. And unfortunately, in many Indian households, where the basics of survival take centre stage, the health of mothers and their newborns is not given much importance.

    - Leening

    ReplyDelete
  3. It is true. While most of us are aware of such programs that are run by the government, no one can deny the fact that people for whom it is intended are hardly even aware of it, forget being beneficiaries of the scheme. For example, the condition of government run medical health centres in Meghalaya is at its poorest state. Lack of proper emergency centres and 24/7 availability of trained physician have been a concern in the interiors. And here we are talking about awareness and schemes. How are we to communicate when most of the people with whom we are dealing are illiterate? On a positive note, AIR’s Aakashvani is constantly airing awareness programmes on health and wellbeing. But again, one wonders how many are actually tuning to AIR.
    Jayanti KC

    ReplyDelete