The Sunday Guardian

Midwives of Araku are on a mission to save mothers

The maternal mortality rate in the Araku Valley in Andhra Pradesh used to be double the national average. But in the last two years, there have been no maternal deaths here, thanks to midwifery.

- MOHAMMED SHAFEEQ

The scenic beauty of Araku Valley in Andhra Pradesh is in stark contrast to the lives of indigenous tribespeop­le inhabiting the region. Living in virtual destitutio­n, these tribals—like their counterpar­ts scattered in remote locations across the rest of India—lack access to basic amenities like safe drinking water, healthcare and education. Till a few years ago, some of these habitation­s were not even covered in the national census and nobody knew they even existed.

But efforts of a leading NGO over the last seven years have yielded results in 181 habitation­s around Araku. This is testified by the fact that no maternal deaths have been reported here over the last two years—a giant step forward for a place where maternal mortality was double the national average.

Before emerging as a tourist destinatio­n about a decade ago, Araku, 100 km from the port city of Visakhapat­nam, was an area that was the redoubt of Maoist extremists. Politician­s and officials used to stay away from this forested area in the Eastern Ghats.

The population in scattered and inaccessib­le hamlets was suffering from malnutriti­on, leading to high maternal mortality and neonatal mortality rates. Some traditiona­l practices of the tribals and deliveries at home were also contributi­ng to this situation.

When the NGO Piramal Swasthya, the health vertical of Piramal Foundation, launched the Asara Tribal Health Programme in 2011, maternal mortality in this tribal area was over 400 per 100,000 live births as against the then national average of around 200.

No maternal deaths have been reported over the last two years while the percentage of institutio­nal deliveries has risen from 18% to 68%. The neonatal mortality rate too has come down from 37 to 10 per 100,000 live births, say the officials of Piramal Swasthya.

The agents behind this change are Auxillary Nurse Midwives (ANMs) like P. Padma who toil selflessly to help the pregnant women in these remote hamlets. The 27-year-old has been working with the NGO for six years and has attended about 3,000 women. She has seen the transforma­tion.

“The situation in the tribal hamlets was pathetic as women were reluctant to come to hospitals for delivery. A major reason for this was the superstiti­on among tribals. Piramal Swasthya has removed the superstiti­ons and motivated the women,” Padma told IANS.

Padma travels 12-13 km in a four-wheeler and, when the road ends, she goes on a bike driven by a “pilot”, covering another 11 km. When this narrow path also ends, she hikes across mountains and valleys for another 12-13 km to the last habitation of Araku.

This is what she does every day, explains Vishal Phanse, Chief Executive Officer, Piramal Swasthya.

Once in the habitation, the ANM identifies every preg- nant woman, conducts basic tests, provides counsellin­g on healthy practices and fixes an appointmen­t for consultati­on with a specialist at the telemedici­ne centre. The next day, a four-wheeler is sent to pick up all pregnant women registered and get them to the telemedici­ne centre, where an expert gynaecolog­ist sitting in Hyderabad provides the consultati­on through teleconfer­encing. Free medication, along with nutrition supplement­s, is also provided to the expectant mother and she is then dropped back to her habitation.

“If a woman can’t walk we arrange palki [a kind of palanquin] to bring her till the four-wheeler to take her to the telemedici­ne centre,” Padma said. Last month, a woman delivered a baby on the palki in Colliguda village. She helped the woman and later safely transporte­d her and the newborn to the hospital.

ANMs support the women and children through their pregnancy, child birth and neonatal period while keeping the government machinery in the loop.

Piramal Swasthya overcame all odds to achieve its goal of ending preventabl­e deaths in 181 habitation­s, serving 49,000 pregnant women.

Adding some more interventi­ons like training traditiona­l birth attendants and health education of adolescent girls, it is now expanding the programme across 11 mandals or blocks comprising 1,179 habitation­s in the tribal belt of Visakhapat­nam district to reach 2.5 lakh population.

It is currently running six telemedici­ne centres and plans to add five more. The NGO will also be opening two more community nutri- tion hubs in addition to existing one, where women are educated about a healthy and nutritious diet and trained in the use of traditiona­l and locally available food items.

Based on the learning in Visakhapat­nam, the NGO wants to create something which can be replicated in the entire tribal belt of India. More than 10% of India’s population is tribal and among them maternal mortality is two-and-a-half times the national average.

“If what works in Araku, works in Visakhapat­nam, then we can replicate it in the entire tribal belt of the country,” said Phanse.

Niti Aayog, India’s policy think-tank, is looking at this model with key interest as to how they can scale it up.

“In fact, a lot of people including the United Nations, government­s in states and at the Centre are looking at it. We had a lot of visitors trying to understand how we managed to do this. We ourselves are learning every day. Technology is a great enabler if you have to scale it up at the national level.”

Phanse believes that 80% of what worked in Araku can be replicated in tribal areas across the country and 20% could be local customisat­ion that they have to work on.

What worked for Piramal Swasthya in Araku? “We have doctors, public health profession­als and experts with the youngest aged 26 and the oldest 78. That’s the kind of expertise we have with actual feet on the ground. Our actuality to work with them, for them, staying with them and understand­ing them is what I think has worked best for us,” said Phanse.

“If you want make anything sustainabl­e in healthcare you have to create health seeking behaviour in the community. We were successful because we changed the community,” he added.

Phanse feels that the community engagement and participat­ion in the programme is key to its success.

For Piramal, winning the trust of the local community was the key challenge. As Araku was an extremist stronghold, gaining the trust of locals took time.

Most of the 38 people that work for the organisati­on are from the local community who are wedded to the cause. Forging the local partnershi­p by using the services of dedicated individual­s who can speak the language of the community ensured smooth implementa­tion.

With 4,000 employees in just its health vertical, Piramal Swasthya is perhaps the largest NGO in India, implementi­ng 29 healthcare projects in 16 states.

India ranks 131 among 188 countries on the Human Developmen­t Index (HDI) 2016 released by the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP). India was placed behind countries like Gabon (109), Egypt (111), Indonesia (113), South Africa (119) and Iraq (121), among others. The government is working towards improving this rating by creating competitio­n between states to perform better on key social indicators like infant mortality rate, maternal mortality rate and life expectancy. IANS

ANMs support the women and children through their pregnancy, child birth and neonatal period while keeping the government machinery in the loop. Piramal Swasthya overcame all odds to achieve its goal of ending preventabl­e deaths in 181 habitation­s, serving 49,000 pregnant women.

 ?? IANS ?? A midwife conducts test on a pregnant woman.
IANS A midwife conducts test on a pregnant woman.

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