Thursday, January 28, 2010

AIDS and Youth

Deke Tourangbam *



In the modern society of Manipur everyone constantly hears about AIDS. The word AIDS at the very first instance commonly brings about a sense of Shame for the victims and topic of taboo to discuss about. It seems not right on the part of the educated individuals to continue such outlook when AIDS has made quite a deep impact on our society.

Acquire ammuno deficiency syndrome generally called AIDS is a dreaded disease. It destroys a person’s Immune system making the person susceptible to various diseases. This disease is caused by a VIRUS called HIV or Human immuno deficiency virus. Once a person acquires this virus he develops various diseases finally leading to his dead. Individuals with full blown AIDS die within 3 years from various infectious diseases.There are no cure for AIDS neither any vaccine has been developed so far.

AIDS is a global disease which has no boundary of region, religion, race or sex.As such it has also hit the shores of our country. The very first case of AIDS was detected in Georgia district of America in the year 1981. In India it was first detected in 1986 in Madras (Chennai) and in Manipur AIDS was firsts detected in 1990.

The badly affected states of our country are Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra and our own state Manipur. But when scenario with respect to Manipur comes in view it is quite alarming. It can even be said that Manipur is sitting on an AIDS time bomb.

Manipur with only 0.2% of India’s total population contribute nearly 8% of India’s HIV +ve cases. So far a total of 9,732 HIV positive cases, 574 AIDS cases, 97 deaths have been reported in our state of Manipur. Still there are greater numbers of undetected and un-confirmed deaths caused due to AIDS.

In other states of India AIDS is mainly spread through sexual contact and very less through IDU users where as in our state Manipur, 76% of AIDS patient are found among the drug users of which the youth (11 to 40 yrs) form 95% of victim.

The main reason behind of this being that Manipur is very closed to the “Golden Triangle” the haven for drugs and lies in the international trade route, secondly the problem prevailing in the state like law and order problems and failures, high scale un-employment, economic backwardness, degrading social, moral, Cultural and Qualitative education, which all has compounded the problem. Today the AIDS disease has acquired the dimension of and epidemic. Among the affected victims mostly is the youth generation which plays a key role in the development of the society.

The free accesses to drugs the immoral behaviour of the youth’s make them highly vulnerable to this disease. Youth generation infact are the key generation of the society. They are responsible for various developmental activities. Inspite of it youth is the time when people like to have fun and explore new things.

So, in this fast trend of westernization society they start using Drugs and developing multiple sexual partners which are the key route of transmission of AIDS virus.If the total youth population is affected than the continuity of the society will be threatened and a complete wipe out of the society will take place as they formed the backbone of the society.

Inspite of many awareness campaigns being organized on the topic. People are still ignorant about the cause with a perception of personal exceptions.

The precaution for this starts with oneself. Every section of society should unite to fight the spread of this menace.

The latest propaganda of marriage after blood test rather than matching the horoscope greatly fits the longevity of relations. A popular education consisting of Moral, Social and Cultural upliftment should be imparted so that all can maintain high values of Character and regard their own rich cultural heritage to that of Western cultures.

Thus it needs a earnest efforts from parens,teachers,social workers and the government organizations to see the magnitude of the problem and start working collectively lest the problem becomes the cause of our end.


* Deke Tourangbam contributes regularly to e-pao.net. The writer can be contacted at deke.tourangbam@gmail.com
This article was webcasted on December 01st, 2009 on the eve of World AIDS Day.

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.

Friday, January 8, 2010

'Flourosis in Nalagonda'

India:

An Enduring Plague - Part III

Disease Caused by Chemical Contamination
Often Strikes Hard In Early Years of Life

Part three of a three-part series

By Ramu Suravajjula

NALGONDA, India – Fluorosis, a crippling disease caused by drinking water with high levels of fluoride, often becomes evident in people early in life.

Kanchukatla Subhash , the founder of a private aid organization dedicated to helping victims of fluorosis, estimated that nearly half of all fluorosis victims in Nalgonda are 15 years of age and younger. In the early years, he said, the damage is usually mild. The progressive ravages of the disease can be stopped, he said, if victims are provided with clean drinking water.

There is no cure for fluorosis, medical experts say. But some researchers say damage has sometimes diminished after victims have begun drinking uncontaminated water and taking vitamins.

image

In the heart of Nalgonda. Photo by Singam Venkataramana


Millions of people around the world are afflicted with fluorosis. In parts of Asia, the Middle East and Africa, fluoride seeps into underground supplies of drinking water. Fluoride is put into drinking water in very small amounts to prevent tooth decay in some parts of the world. But high-levels of fluoride can be crippling. Unhealthy deposits of fluoride have been found in underground sources of drinking water in the United States also. But no major incidents of fluorosis have been reported there

For decades the problem here in one of the poorest areas in India has only gotten worse. More and more people have become victims as they have drunk the only water available to them.

Nalgonda city and district, with 3.6 million people in the south India state of Andhra Pradesh, is believed to be among the places in the world with the greatest concentration of fluorosis victims. This is the third in a series of articles about fluorosis in Nalgonda.

No comprehensive statistics on fluorosis victims exists. But some non-government experts estimate that hundreds of thousands of people are suffering with fluorosis in Nalgonda and that there are perhaps at least several million more victims elsewhere in India. The government figure for fluorosis victims in Nalgonda is 70,000.

Over the years, the government and non-governmental aid organizations barely addressed the epidemic of fluorosis. In a plaintive statement on the website, nalgonda.org, victims of fluorosis and their supporters said that except during election campaigns, “local and other leaders conveniently forgot about our drinking water problems.”

Court orders to provide aid to the fluorosis victims largely have been ignored and International projects have failed. Some clean water is being provided in Nalgonda, government officials say. But officials of non-governmental agencies say many people continue to drink fluoride contaminated water.

But there have been some improvements. Two years ago work began on tunnels and a reservoir that are intended to eventually bring fresh water from the Krishna River to many people in Nalgonda. The government has also started providing small payments to some fluorosis victims.

The main tunnel from the Krishna River is planned to be 26 miles or 43.5 kilometers long. So far, three miles of the tunnel have been completed. Government officials expect the tunnel project to cost nearly 28 million rupees or nearly $600 million–far more than the state government has ever spent on fluorosis. But the tunnel will only provide water to the people of Nalgonda. And medical experts and officials of private aid organizations say much more needs to be done to tackle this problem elsewhere in Andhra Pradesh and other parts of India.

image

Fluoride’s harm. Courtesy of
Shailesh Reddy


The fluorosis victims here and elsewhere in the country have attracted little attention outside India. The victims have mainly struggled along on their own.

As far back as 1945, signs of fluorosis were emerging in Nalgonda. But a series of state and national governments has not focused on the problem, said Venu Sankoju, a popular poet in the region who has written about fluorosis victims.

As an example of the intensity of fluorosis in Nalgonda, Mr. Subhash, the founder of Fluorosis Vimukti Porata Samtihi or the Organization to Fight Fluorosis, said that the underground water in 48 of the 59 mandals or groups of villages in Nalgonda were at least partly contaminated.

Government officials in the villages of Marriguda, Batlapally and Nampally, where many people have been afflicted, told me they have no statistics on the number of victims of fluorosis. They also said they had no details on the health of the victims.

Mr. Subhash said the government’s count of victims greatly understated the extent of the disease. He said the government’s calculation was “slap dash work” and that he believed the government was deliberately understating the extent of fluorosis. One local official who would speak only on condition that he not be identified, said that data collected by the Andhra Pradesh’s Department of Rural Water Supply showed 70,000 fluorosis victims in Nalgonda. He said the government had no reason to minimize the extent of the disease. “Why should we hush up a problem,” he asked.

Initially, medical experts say, fluorosis mainly attacks the teeth. The chemical erodes and deeply pits the enamel. Dr. Jayaprakash Reddy, a doctor in Nalgonda who is not related to the political leaders, said he has seen many victims of fluorosis “Discoloration of the teeth is the first symptom,” he said in an interview. “ As children grow up drinking fluoride-contaminated water, their bones slowly become stiff resulting in pain and awkward physical appearance.”

A summary of a medical study by Dr. D. Raja Reddy, no relation to the other Reddys in this article, published on a blog called “India Current Affairs,” said that when studies of fluorosis were done in Nalgonda in 1945 no children were observed with deformed arms and legs. The first reports of those conditions, he said, came in the 1970s. This seems to suggest that the contamination of the drinking water has intensified.

According to Dr. Reddy, in the medical summary, nutrition and the amount of calcium in the system, are important factors in the development of fluorosis. He said that some people in the Punjab region in the north of India are exposed to high concentrations of fluoride. But he said they also get high levels of calcium and that a study of children in the Punjab found no children with deformed arms and legs.

In a study of two villages in Nalgonda presented at the 4th International Workshop on Fluorosis Prevention and Defluoridation of Water in Sri Lanka in 2004, A.S. Narayana and two other authors found dental fluorosis in 96 to 97 percent of the people they interviewed and skeletal fluorosis in 45 to 60 percent. They said more than half of those interviewed reported suffering joint pain, stiff necks, gastric problems and a burning sensation during urination. After the people in the study drank uncontaminated water and took vitamins A and B for some time, the researchers said, many of the symptoms improved markedly.

For years, Mr. Subhash of the Organization to Fight Fluorosis, had campaigned for water treatment plants. With help from the Netherlands, the government of Andhra Pradesh built 20 treatment plants to remove fluoride from drinking water. But the plants fell into disrepair and gradually became useless.

At that point, Mr. Subhash began urging the government of Andra Pradesh to provide drinking water from the Krishna River. “After the failure of the Netherland’s project, we never sought de-fluoridation plants,” he said. “What we want is uninterrupted supply of Krishna waters to fluoride-afflicted villages.”

In the Krishna River tunnel construction project started two years ago, workers are cutting through hills and mountains with heavy machinery.

Dusarla Satyanarayana, a former private bank officer and the founder of the “Organization to Achieve Water” or “Jala Sadhana Samithi,” was also a leader in getting the government to build the tunnel. He organized protest rallies in Hyderabad and in New Delhi, the capital of India, and went on hunger strikes.

In 2005, the state government began paying fluorosis victims a small monthly stipend. But Mr. Subhash says the payments of 200 rupees or $4 monthly are too small – even in an area where the average monthly pay is $20 - and that only a fraction of those eligible for the money are getting it.

“They are giving this money to about 3,000 people,” Mr. Subhash said. “In fact the number of victims who deserve financial support is much more than 800,000. They all should be paid a compensation of 1,000 rupees per month.”

In 1996 the fluorosis problem here attracted rare international attention. Despairing at the government’s inaction, 525 people in the city of Nalgonda rushed to compete for a single seat in India’s lower house of Parliament in New Delhi. Bommagani Dharma Bhiksham, the candidate of the Communist Party of India, won. But the communists had little influence in Parliament and Mr. Bhiksham was unable to make much progress on fluorosis.

Now both representatives from Nalgonda District, one from the city and one from elsewhere in the district, are members of the ruling Congress Party. They are in position to push for national backing for fluorosis assistance.

Since the Congress Party won control of the national government and most of India in 2004, the party’s leaders in Andhra Pradesh have rallied to the cause of fluorosis. And, finally, a major project to relieve the epidemic is underway.


http://www.1h2o.org/index.php/dev_site/featured_story/india2/

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Reporing Fluorosis

For the coming week's blog assignment, I would like you to research how the subject 'Flourosis in Nalagonda' has been reported in different journals/papers/magazines/media. Look for articles in leading English language weekly magazines, academic journals, web journals etc. What are the different medical and social issues these writings have thrown up?
To help you begin your research here is a link to an article from the British Medical Journal:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1981710/pdf/brmedj03237-0018.pdf

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

In hospital for 36 years, woman moves court for mercy killing

Dec.17 2009

J. Venkatesan
After she was strangled, nurse has been in vegetative state
No possibility of improvement in Aruna’s condition

Mashed food is being given to keep her alive

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Wednesday issued notice to the Centre, the Maharashtra government and a private hospital in Mumbai on a writ petition, filed by a patient lying in bed for 36 years in a vegetative state, for mercy killing by stopping mashed food.

The petition was filed by Aruna Ramachandra Shanbaug through her friend Pinki Virani of Mumbai.

According to her, Aruna has been in a pathetic state in the hospital since November 1973. When she was working as staff nurse, she was assaulted and strangled by a sweeper with a dog chain to immobilise her. Her brain cells got damaged and since then she has been in a vegetative state. Her bones became brittle, wrists were twisted inwards, and fingers bent at the joints and fisted into the palms. Her teeth have decayed. Mashed food is being administered through the throat to keep her alive.

There is no possibility of any improvement in Aruna’s condition, and her continued vegetative existence is a violation of her right to live in dignity, says the petition.

Chief Justice K.G. Balakrishnan and Justices A.K. Ganguly and B.S. Chauhan were on the Bench which issued the notice.

http://www.thehindu.com/2009/12/17/stories/2009121758112000.htm