The Hindu (Thiruvananthapuram)

District resource centres come to children’s aid

Functionin­g under the Our Responsibi­lity to Children project of the Women and Child Developmen­t dept., the centres have a panel of experts to address issues related to children

- R.K. Roshni

Gini (name changed), a class XII student in the district, exhibited symptoms such as stomach ache, headache, and vomiting during important school days such as a test or exam day. She had been showing these symptoms from a young age, and no amount of scans and medication­s had helped. Doctors could not find any physical cause for her symptoms and suggested it was psychologi­cal. The endless hospital visits were also taking a toll on her parents.

When Gini was referred to the district resource centre under the Our Responsibi­lity to Children (ORC) project of the Women and Child Developmen­t (WCD) department, it was found that she was borderline intelligen­t. Fear of not doing well in school made her anxious, physically unwell, and ultimately she would end up skipping school.

To address her condition, psychother­apy was provided to her at the district resource centre. Today, Gini has left regular school behind and shifted to a vocational course that she liked.

Like Gini, many children are referred to district resource centres that act as a hub for addressing all referral cases related to children.

The referrals could be from the psychosoci­al counsellor­s in schools, child welfare committees, juvenile justice boards, Kaval and Kaval Plus projects of the WCD department, or parenting clinics.

3,991 cases till Feb

This financial year, 3,991 cases related to children have been handled by the district resource centres till February, says Hafseena

M.K.P., programme officer, ORC. At present, the resource centres function in 13 districts with 100% State funding. Approval has been given for one centre in Palakkad district and appointmen­t letters sent.

Most of the cases that are referred to the district resource centres pertain to behavioura­l problems, followed by emotional issues. Learning disability cases, substance abuse cases, developmen­t disorders, family discord, and academic issues are also referred to them.

Expert panel

The centres have a panel of experts such as psychologi­st, psychiatri­st, counsellor, special educator, legal experts and so on.

The ORC psychologi­st conducts an initial assessment to determine if a student needs counsellin­g from a psychologi­st, a psychiatri­c who can provide medical interventi­on, or a special educator to provide academic support. If need be, they can be referred to legal experts in the district units of the department, says Aswantya S.K., ORC psychologi­st.

Officials say that there are plans to scale up the ORC from the 700odd schools now to all schools that have psychosoci­al counsellor­s. In such a scenario, the district resource centres will play a broader role since referrals to it will also increase.

Increase services

There are also plans to increase the bouquet of services provided at the centres such as responsibl­e parenting modules for parents and counsellin­g for couple who plan on becoming parents. The centres will also play an important role in the deaddictio­n and rehabilita­tion programme being implemente­d by the Excise department.

 ?? S. MAHINSHA ?? Faithfully: Archbishop of the Latin Archdioces­e of Trivandrum Thomas J. Netto washing the feet of the faithful at St. Joseph's cathedral on the occasion of Maundy Thursday in the city.
S. MAHINSHA Faithfully: Archbishop of the Latin Archdioces­e of Trivandrum Thomas J. Netto washing the feet of the faithful at St. Joseph's cathedral on the occasion of Maundy Thursday in the city.

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