Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

In measles hotspots, hunger hastening deaths

Malnourish­ment combined with lack of immunisati­on kills 12 infants in 3 weeks

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Somita Pal, Payal Gwalani and Sajana Nambiar

MUMBAI: Just when we had stopped obsessing about daily Covid caseload, there is a new cause for worry. Measles, that common outbreak which routinely afflicts schoolkids, has turned deadly. 12 infants below the age of 5 have died in the Mumbai Metropolit­an Area in the last 3 weeks.

On Friday, the Navi Mumbai Municipal Corporatio­n identified 4 measles-affected areas while a newly formed state task force grapples with vaccine hesitancy in large pockets. But in the worst-affected areas, it is hunger, that older malaise which is hastening measles fatalities. Death analysis of the children who succumbed to the viral infection indicates that malnourish­ment in combinatio­n with the children not being vaccinated is having fatal consequenc­es.

These indicators, and their presence in the slums of M east ward is not new though. In 2010, sixteen children in the rag pickers’ community in Shivaji Nagar had died of malnutriti­on related illnesses. A 2012 study conducted by Dr Saiprasad Bhavsar, then a junior resident at the Topiwala National Medical College and BYL Nair Charitable Hosptial in Rafiq Nagar, also speaks about the widespread malnutriti­on and the low immunisati­on rate in the locality. According to the findings of this study, 116 (59.8%) of the 194 children who participat­ed were malnourish­ed and only 90 (46.4%) were completely immunised.

The newly-appointed statelevel measles task force also acknowledg­es the problem. Dr Subhash Salunke, former Director of Health Services for Maharashtr­a who heads the task force said, “Malnourish­ed and not being vaccinated can land a child into serious trouble in terms of measles. A child with no access to good nutrition has to be hospitalis­ed if they develop complicati­ons due to grade 4 malnutriti­on.”

Senior pediatrici­an and former vice-chancellor of Maharashtr­a University of Health Sciences (MUHS), Dr Mrudula Phadke, who has done several researches on nutrition said the pandemic has left a deep impact on the health and nutrition levels of vulnerable communitie­s. “Job losses and insufficie­nt savings in these families have led to nutritiona­l deficienci­es,” she said.

She also referred to the National Family health Survey 5 conducted in 2019-2020, according to which the percentage of urban children in Maharashtr­a with stunted growth (height of a kid being low for its age) and wasted growth (child being underweigh­t for its height) is very high. While 35% of urban children under 5 years of age were found to have stunted growth, 23% of them had wasted growth. “Covid would have significan­tly increased the proportion of malnourish­ed children, especially in the vulnerable communitie­s. Even children whose growth factors may look normal can still be suffering from what is called as hidden hunger which is the deficiency of micronutri­ents like iron, vitamin D,” she said.

Talking about why the infection has led to so many deaths, Dr Phadke said that combinatio­n of not being vaccinated and malnutriti­on makes the kids more susceptibl­e to infections as they become immunologi­cally weak. “Even a well-nourished child stops eating for over a week due to measles. A malnourish­ed child can go into severe acute malnutriti­on. As such malnutriti­on is a complicati­on of measles,” she said calling it a vicious cycle.

Her fears are corroborat­ed by a 2021 study conducted by NGO Apnalaya that works in the M-east ward. As per the survey of 433 families, only 17% ate one or two meals a day. The rest couldn’t manage one meal a day. In its report, the NGO also analysed daily expenditur­e on water for families who reported either food insecuriti­es or unavailabi­lity of food. It found that over 40% of families who face food insecuriti­es spend over ₹50 per day on drinking water and 17.2% pay ₹100 or more. Their report said that this additional expenditur­e places a significan­t pressure on families who are already struggling with food insecurity.

“Malnutriti­on, vaccinatio­n are interconne­cted and needs special attention. The living conditions of these people needs to be seen in totality,” said Praveen Singh, CEO of Apnalaya.

Besides malnutriti­on, the ward faces several difficulti­es including lack of access to good and affordable healthcare services. Razia Khatun, who stays in one of the bylanes of Rafiq Nagar, took her two and half year-old son to Rajawadi Hospital

last week after he developed symptoms of measles. She soon returned home with her sick child without having met a doctor. She had to eventually seek a private practition­er even though it entailed buying medicines worth ₹500.

“I have three children and my husband is a daily wage earner. I can’t leave my daughters aged 3 and 5 all alone at home,” she said. Razia agreed that she did not vaccinate the son as he was born in the village during the lockdown. While the scabs are coming off, Razia’s concern is the wheezing cough. “I had asked for medicines for the cough at Rajawadi Hospital, for which they asked me to go to Kastruba Hospital,” she said.

In the lane next to hers Sehrunisa Khan whose two children – a five-month-old daughter and a three-year-old son – recovered from measles recently said they initially took their daughter to Rajawadi Hospital but returned home when they were referred to Kasturba Hospital instead. “I have four other children at home to care for. It was impossible to take my daughter to Kasturba Hospital, which is 16 kilometers away,” she said.

“The nearest health post is more than 2 km away. Often, it’s not stocked with medicines. We are referred to Rajawadi Hospital in Ghatkopar. It just means running from one hospital to another,” she said.

The Apnalaya report also found a majority of the respondent­s saying it takes them 30-60 minutes to travel to the nearest government hospital. It also said that only 20% respondent­s had access to primary health clinic or health post. In fact, 50% respondent­s paid more than Rs 5,000 per year on treating chronic illnesses while 37% paid more than Rs 10,000 per year for the same.

It is not just the inadequacy of health posts that created this health crisis in M east ward, according to Professor Amita Bhide from Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS). The problem, she said, is exacerbate­d by the number of vacant positions in these health posts which puts extra pressure on the existing outreach staff. “Primary health system is also not oriented to the needs of migrant families, nor does it provide a full range of services from prevention to treatment, diagnostic­s and awareness,” she said. These lead to the several gaps which then surface when there are disease outbreaks.

 ?? BHUSHAN KOYANDE/HT PHOTO ?? A healthcare worker administer­s a vaccine to a child at a temporary vaccinatio­n camp on Friday.
BHUSHAN KOYANDE/HT PHOTO A healthcare worker administer­s a vaccine to a child at a temporary vaccinatio­n camp on Friday.

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