In the discourse on rural health, primary health care that reaches all people has long been emphasized, along with prioritizing the needs of the poorest and advancing the right-to-health approach in participative ways. These objectives are not always realized in spirit, but their importance is widely acknowledged.
Initially, there was broad agreement on adopting a comprehensive approach that included all health and nutrition issues defined broadly. However, when efforts were made to implement this, budgetary constraints often led to selective prioritization of goals considered most urgent—usually those expected to reduce mortality and disability most effectively.
Nutrition is central to good health, and health and nutrition are increasingly considered together. Yet health workers often recommend nutritious foods that poor households cannot afford. Solutions include focusing on local, low-cost nutrition sources and promoting interventions such as kitchen gardens to supply vegetables and fruits. While welcome, these measures cannot fully compensate if overall livelihood conditions deteriorate.
This underlines the need for health initiatives to integrate livelihood concerns. A rural development model centered on justice for small farmers and landless households, natural and mixed farming, biodiversity, forest and tree cover, cottage industries, water and soil conservation, seed preservation, and community self-reliance would strengthen both health and nutrition. In the Indian context, such an approach resonates with the ‘gram swaraj’ vision of Mahatma Gandhi.
Participative models can yield creative, low-cost solutions, reducing dependence on chemical fertilizers, fossil fuels, and expensive machinery, and helping farmers escape economic crises. Many of these steps—such as soil conservation, forest regeneration, and natural farming—also contribute to climate change mitigation and adaptation, making them doubly valuable.
Social reform, too, is closely linked with health outcomes. Efforts to reduce alcohol and tobacco consumption, curb child marriage, promote gender justice, empower women’s participation, expand holistic education, and curb gambling are all vital. Women-led village committees can play a key role.
Peace and non-violence, often discussed only at national or global levels, are equally critical in everyday rural life. Domestic violence, inter-family feuds, exploitation, caste and faith-based discrimination, and prolonged legal disputes all create mental stress, poverty, and malnutrition. A program for promoting peace and justice at the village level, therefore, should be an integral part of holistic health interventions.
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The writer is Honorary Convener, Campaign to Save Earth Now. His recent books include Protecting Earth for Children, Planet in Peril, Man over Machine, and A Day in 2071
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