Skip to main content

Project launched to fight high malnutrition in Odisha's backward Malkangiri district

By A Representative

Odisha civil rights groups have launched a new project, which will cover 8,000 households under of Podia block in Odisha’s Malkangiri district in order to provide essential preventive medicine to the community through the trained village-based Swasthya Sathis (health workers) and fight malnutrition in the district’s rural areas.
The aim is to “improve nutrition and health status and bridge gaps in access to healthcare among primitive tribes of Odisha's Malkangiri district”, say sources in the non-profit Atmashakti Trust and its ally Shramajeebee Sangathan, which are behind the project.
The effort is to declared “malnutrition free villages” in the Podia block. A similar malnutrition-free village project has been successful in four blocks of Kandhamal district, where it was launched in 2014 helping over 21,000 people of 181 villages.
“Our focus would be awareness building, strengthening local healthcare institutions, disease prevention, bringing behavioural changes among communities, promoting backyard kitchen gardens in project villages and linking them with the nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive government schemes through village health committees and form health-kits in project villages'', says Shanti Beka, Podia block president, Mahila Shramajeebee Sangathan, Malkangiri, who attended a project launching event.
An NGO note claims, over the last few years, the project has been launched to support the Odisha government’s efforts at a time the State has made “stirring jumps in improving health and nutrition indicators”, adding, “Odisha is the first Indian state to have a specific nutrition budget in the country.”
The note says, between National Family Health Survey (NFHS)-3 (2005-06) and NFHS-4 (2015-16), the share of malnourished children under the age group of 5 in the state declined to 34.4% from 40.7%. Yet, it regrets, there exists an intra-district disparity.
“Malnutrition is as high as 51.8% in Malkangiri despite it being feted as an aspirational district, a ranking made by Niti Ayog and UNDP based on the change in net resilience from March 2018 to March 2020. The Annual Health Survey report 2014 also reveals that 7 out of 10 children in Malkangiri are underweight”, it underlines.
"Poor and improper dietary habits, social norms, perceived practices and lack of road infrastructure have been the potential barriers to fight malnutrition. The health infrastructure in the district is also woefully inadequate. Therefore, we started this much-needed intervention which is a cost-effective and community-owned healthcare model with a focus on integrated behaviour change communication”, says Ruchi Kashyap, executive trustee, Atmashakti Trust.

Comments

TRENDING

To Sonam Wangchuk: 'Will undertake 70 hour solidarity fast in Gujarat'

By Martin Macwan *  Dear Colleague Sonam Wangchuk, I have never met you personally. I wrote a short article at the time of your arrest. Your work correctly introduces you. There is truth in your words. You have embarked on a fast, following the footsteps of Gandhiji. Your intention is to make people think. Your demand is reasonable; I believe that the resignation of a single education minister will not improve the state of education in India. However, the question you have raised is extremely important for the future generation of the marginalized. Education is the key to power, development, and progress, which empowers a citizen.

US civil society coalition slams Hudson Institute for hosting RSS leaders

By A Representative   The Hudson Institute ’s “New India Conference,” held on April 23, featured senior figures from India’s ruling political ecosystem, including RSS General Secretary Dattatreya Hosabale and BJP foreign affairs head Vijay Chauthaiwale . The event also included U.S. officials and former diplomats such as Kurt Campbell, Kenneth Juster, and Nisha Biswal, alongside India’s Ambassador to the U.S., Vinay Kwatra.  

Remembering Rampur ka Tiraha: State violence and the birth of Uttarakhand’s struggle

By Vidya Bhushan Rawat*  In the turbulent political landscape of the early 1990s, India witnessed events that reshaped its social and regional equations. After the Babri Masjid demolition in 1992, Uttar Pradesh politics shifted dramatically, bringing the Samajwadi Party–Bahujan Samaj Party coalition to power in 1993 under Mulayam Singh Yadav. But the partnership was uneasy. Mulayam was never entirely comfortable playing the “Mandal card.” While Kanshi Ram and the BSP had consistently demanded the implementation of the Mandal Commission recommendations, Mulayam hesitated, wary of how the move might play out.