Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Wasted young lives in the heart of India

CHILDREN OF HUNGER In MP’s Sheopur and Shivpuri districts severe malnutriti­on has led to a high number of infant deaths even as government’s nutrition centres remain underutili­sed

- Sanchita Sharma sanchitash­arma@hindustant­imes.com n

SHIV PU RI, SHE OP UR( MADHYA PRADESH ): Each of the 88 families belonging to the Saharia tribe has lost at least one child to malnutriti­on in Bhairopura village in Madhya Pradesh’s Shivpuri district.

Dhaka Adivasi, 30, has three children and has lost six over the past decade. Two of 32-year-old Parvati’s five children died before the age of five. Anjana, 25, lost one baby last week, her third to die in as many years. Eighteen-year-old Malti’s firstborn Lakshmi died a few days after she turned nine months old. Most of the deaths happened between nine months and three years. All the children died of hunger—defined medically as severe acute malnutriti­on (SAM) which, directly or indirectly, causes for one in three under-5 deaths in India. Countless mothers across India share the tragedy of Parvati and Anjana. Though the shockingly high number of children dying of malnutriti­on has put the spotlight on Sheopur and Shivpuri, hunger and malnutriti­on are chronic in many parts of India.

Poverty and social exclusion plays a big role, as does lack of informatio­n. Mothers feed their children the best they can, but their best is not enough. Most children are being exclusivel­y breastfed till well past the age of 18 months, sometimes up to age 2.

Malnourish­ed and anaemic, most women cannot nourish their babies, who waste away slowly and die while the mothers watch helplessly.

The cause of the children’s deaths, when certified, is listed as SAM, characteri­sed by very low weight for height (below -3z scores of the median growth standards), visible severe wasting, or nutritiona­l oedema (swelling from acute protein deficiency).

LIVES LOST

Over the past two months, 23 children have died of malnutriti­on in neighbouri­ng Sheopur district, where the highlypubl­icised Nutritiona­l Rehabilita­tion Centres (NRC) meant to save SAM children remain deserted.

Aganwadi workers and ANM (for auxiliary nurse midwife, or village health worker) bring visibly diseased children ages six months to 5 years to NRCs, where the children are admitted with their mothers for 14 days and given nutritiona­l therapeuti­c care.

The mother is fed and trained in healthy nutrition practice and baby is discharged only after there is at least 15% weight gain over the admission day, which takes around two weeks. The children are followed up four times at an interval of 15 days over the next two months to ensure the weight gain continues and the child becomes healthy.

Reality, however, presents a different picture. Last week, the 20-bed NRC at Karhal had one occupant and another at Pohari had three women with children. In both places, the women had been admitted that day.

There was a spike in admissions in Karhal NRC over September following an outcry over malnutriti­on deaths, with SAM admissions going up to 302 in April-October 2016, compared to 239 in April 2015-March 2016, but the referrals dipped during the festive season of Dusshera and Diwali, when most aganwadi workers and ANMs were on leave.

“One woman was forcefully taken away by her husband today. Her baby was doing well, and had put on almost 300 gm over four days,” said Arti Pathak, feeding demonstrat­or, Karhal NRC. “Her husband said he’d bring her back, but we have three more children on their way.”

BIG DIVIDE

The newer and larger NRC ward at Pohari has sicker children and less enthusiast­ic workers. All three children weigh half of what they should: Dipika and Lalita are 15 months old and weigh 5kg and 5.05kg respective­ly, and 14-month-old Kamal Singh weighs 5 kg.

“These three just arrived, more should come over the week now that the anganwadi workers are coming back from leave,” says Suman Tomar, caretaker at the NRC.

The block medical officer has a different take on the low bed occupancy. “Mothers are given ₹100 for travel, ₹120 a day to compensate for lost earning, and ₹220 for each follow-up, but they still leave. They don’t like it here, they like living in the jungle. They don’t care for their children like other people do,” explains Dr Pawan Korku, block medical officer, Pohari.

Sachin Kumar Jain, state advisor to Supreme Court Commission on Right to Food, however, points to other factors.

“More than half of the doctors’ posts are vacant, primary health system is not responding to the needs. It’s a chronic hunger situation and we need a commit- ment to ensure the availabili­ty and access to diverse local food in a sustained manner,” Jain says.

“There is urgent need to plan interventi­ons to address the underlying and structural causes of malnutriti­on. The Madhya Pradesh government has not shown any willingnes­s for making operationa­l framework for community based management of malnutriti­on.”

When done right, under-5 malnutriti­on deaths can halve in hospital settings and by giving readymade therapeuti­c foods to women in community setting. “We give therapeuti­c packages to mother for the SAM baby when they leave, but they take it home and share it with the entire family, so it gets over in a day,” says Pathak.

In his Niti Ayog address last week, Microsoft-founder Bill Gates said, “If I had one wish that I can get rid of any disease, any health problem, I will pick malnutriti­on. That’s saying a lot because there are other challenges, such as HIV, malaria and TB. But malnutriti­on causes the greatest problem, not only for the child who dies but the kid who survives, who never fully develops physically and mentally.”

If India wants to make the most of its demographi­c edge, its young population must meet its nutritiona­l and developmen­t indices.

 ??  ?? The 20bed Nutritiona­l Rehabilita­tion Centre (NRC) set up to save the lives children with Severe Acute Malnourish­ment (SAM) at Pohari in Madhya Pradesh has only three occupants. VIRENDRA SINGH GOSAIN/HT PHOTO
The 20bed Nutritiona­l Rehabilita­tion Centre (NRC) set up to save the lives children with Severe Acute Malnourish­ment (SAM) at Pohari in Madhya Pradesh has only three occupants. VIRENDRA SINGH GOSAIN/HT PHOTO
 ?? VIRENDRA SINGH GOSAIN/HT PHOTO ?? Dhaka Adivasi, 30, has three children while she has lost six to malnutriti­on in Bhairopura village of Madhya Pradesh’s Shivpuri district.
VIRENDRA SINGH GOSAIN/HT PHOTO Dhaka Adivasi, 30, has three children while she has lost six to malnutriti­on in Bhairopura village of Madhya Pradesh’s Shivpuri district.

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