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Home \ Initiatives \ Malnutrition Eradication |
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Malnutrition Eradication Program, Madhya Pradesh, India December 2009 By Caitlin McQuilling Malnutrition is one of the most serious health problems facing the Indian state today. Not only does malnutrition raise a child’s chances of mortality from common diseases such as pneumonia and malaria, constituting 22% of the country’s disease burden, malnutrition also has lasting effects for the children who survive childhood: children who have been malnourished in the first 5 years of life will have limited mental and physical growth capacity as compared to a well-nourished child.
Real Medicine Foundation’s Approach The Real Medicine Foundation aims to tackle malnutrition by closing the gap between the resources available and the families who need them by focusing our program on the basics of malnutrition identification, treatment, and prevention and inserting simple, but innovative technologies and practices. We strengthen existing systems, structures, and management capacity of government and non-governmental organization partners at the most local levels. By working with individuals, government health workers, self-help groups, NGOs, and local businesses to identify, treat, and prevent malnutrition at the community level, we ensure that malnutrition can be addressed locally and earlier, making our approach a sustainable and cost-effective one. For more information on our approaches, click here.
Widespread malnutrition in Madhya Pradesh, India – A note from the field
Jhabua, Alirajpur, Khandwa, Khargone June 2009 By Caitlin McQuilling Malnutrition is one of the most serious and large scale health problems facing the Indian state today:
The millions of children who do survive childhood will be forever affected by malnutrition: children who have been malnourished in the first 5 years of life will have limited mental and physical growth capacity as compared to a well-nourished child. There is evidence that a malnourished child will someday have children with low birth weights, perpetuating the cycle of malnutrition Malnutrition is rampant throughout almost every town in southwestern MP. While traveling through the districts of Jhabua, Alirajpur, Khandwa, and Khargone this June we found malnourished children in every other household at best, in every household at worst. Southwest MP has been one of the states worst affected by malnutrition in India for decades. While Madhya Pradesh’s state malnutrition average of 60% malnutrition in children under 5 is already “extremely alarming” according to the Global Hunger Index, malnutrition in the southwestern tribal areas of the state is even more concerning. According to Rural Health Commission the proportion of underweight children in these districts can range from 61-96%.
Looking forward, a cause for great concern: The current situation right now in Southwestern MP is alarming, especially in the context of the deaths reported last year during the monsoon season. We can only expect this year to be worse. Seasonal migration, the economic effects of the delayed monsoon, a particularly bad harvest last year, and higher food prices this year all will compound the already dire situation. Local NGO workers in Khandwa give the season between June and October the dramatic but not inaccurate title, “the season of death.” Each year the monsoon comes at the time when families are the most food insecure, running towards the end of their stocks from the last harvest. The monsoon brings back migrants who were away from their villages for seasonal labor where they often become malnourished because of the higher food prices and unsanitary conditions in the major cities where they migrate. The monsoon brings with it the yearly bout of waterborne diseases, diarrhea, and pneumonia. Entire families are required to work during this period, leaving young children the most vulnerable to improper feeding and care. According to data collected by the NGO Spandan in Khandwa, last year over 55 children died in just 22 blocks that were monitored and recorded in the Khalwa block of Khandwa. There is nothing unique about the Khalwa block besides the fact that it was closely monitored. Similar conditions are found throughout tribal MP and similar death tolls can be expected throughout Southwestern MP. Last year child deaths started in June, continued increasing throughout July and August, and peaked in September.
Despite a renewed focus on malnutrition by government, media, and NGOs in Southwest MP, there has been little improvement from this year to last year. In a study conducted by the Bhil Rural Community Health Centre in Jhabua3, it was found that only 10% of the children screened for malnutrition recovered from May 2008 to May 2009 (not all children could be relocated in 2009, but the majority revisited, see Annex 1). In only 14 villages we found 609 malnourished children out of 3,115. This 20% malnutrition rate is low for the region, but these are all urban villages located fairly close to the Jhabua market, are somewhat more prosperous than other areas of Jhabua, and are villages who receive access to Real Medicine Foundation and Bhil Health and Literacy Society resources (the RMF malnutrition eradication initiative just launched last month, so improvement who this initiative is still hard to measure). The Jhabua NRC is currently filled over capacity with 21 severely malnourished cases. In Khargone we’ve seen similar lack of improvement. The Spandan organization did a rapid assessment of 177 children in the Jhirniya block of Khargone in December of 2008 (see annex 2)
When we visited 3 out of 8 of these villages this June we were only able to track down 15 of the children because the majority of the families had migrated or were out in the fields. Out of those 15 children, only one had improved, the majority stayed the same, and 4 got worse. Spandan also reports that even after all the interventions last summer in Khandwa, child deaths due to malnutrition carried on until November. They report that 6 children died between October and November and that the malnutrition rate remained at above 62% of children under 5 (see annex 2). Other districts in the area as equally as alarming. Spandan reports that out of 8 villages surveyed in Burhanpur, 12 children had died between June and November of 2009. These villages saw malnutrition rates of 75%, with the overwhelming majority (83%) of families choosing to pay private doctors instead of seeking government help. The high rates of malnutrition in this region are especially concerning because of the weak treatment and preventative care infrastructure and services available at the community level. Right to Food estimates that Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS) currently only covers 36% of MP’s 0-6 population and 30% of the pregnant women. The Anganwadi workers – village health workers who the corner stones to the ICDS scheme - are absent, officially and unofficially, from many towns. Anganwadi workers we were able to track down were insufficiently trained, had irregular attendance records, and rarely made home visits. Adequate supervision of anganwadi centers appears to be lacking. None of the anganwadi helpers, who spend considerable amount of time with the children had been trained. The anganwadi centers in Khandwa did not help prevent the deaths of children. In fact, 80% percent of the children who died in Khandwa were registered at the anganwadi center.
This figure is not surprising, given the state of many of the anganwadi centers that we saw throughout Khandwa and the other districts. Anganwadi centers we viewed were dark and poorly ventilated. They most often lacked sufficient stock of essential medicines such as oral rehydration solution (ORS) and rarely had scales. The quality of the food served at Anganwadi centers was extremely poor during the feeding times we observed. The packaged foods served were often broken rice with a few bits of broken daal. Mostly children over two years old would show up alone for food and leave. Pregnant and nursing mothers and their babies were visibly missing from the anganwadi centers. The anganwadi center in Damkheda, Khargone was even more alarming. We visited this village twice in two weeks. The first day, the anganwadi worker never showed up. The anganwadi assistant, who had no idea how many children were registered, said the anganwadi worker lived in a few villages away along with all the records and the scales. In this village we found 4 severely malnourished children and almost no immunizations or knowledge about ORS. When we met the anganwadi she claimed that no children in the village are malnourished, when in fact 2 children sitting in the same room were. Nutrition Rehabilitation Centers – absence of F-100, F-75 and patient reluctance to attend For a variety of reasons, many families are resorting to paying money to private doctors for treatment of severe acute malnutrition and related diseases. The principal reason is that these centers don’t require patients to be an inpatient, so parents prefer one day treatment to 14 days in one place. Many of these families have also been failed by the NRC before. There are countless stories about children who go in and out to the NRCs with no results (currently conducting a survey to measure this). Spandan found that in Burhanpur, 83% of families took their kids to private practioners. Not all of these are bad, but some can be dangerous. Ramnaray, below, was brought to the NRC 4 times according to his parents. When he kept getting worse and contracting respiratory infections his parents finally took him to a “Bengali doctor.” This doctor burned him with an iron to get right of the infection. His parents and the local villagers believe that it worked.
Annex 1, Jhabua, May 2008 – June 2009
1National Family Household Survey – III (NFHS-III), 2006
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