'Barefoot' Health Care Providers in Rural India

OneWorld US, OneWorld UK, Down to Earth, The Economic Times
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WASHINGTON, Feb 19 (OneWorld.net) - Thousands of volunteers in Kerala state, southern India, provide palliative care to poor, chronically-ill patients within the confines of their homes. K.M. Basheer, the man behind this medical movement, is a farmer with a modest educational background.

  • A woman cares for a patient in an Indian hostpital. © IN164S10 World Bank (Flickr)A woman cares for a patient in an Indian hostpital. © IN164S10 World Bank (Flickr)

    "Rural health care in India faces a crisis unmatched by any other sector of the economy," wrote economist Arvind Panagariya in the Indian newspaper The Economic Times last year. "Only 20 percent of those seeking outpatient services and 45 percent of those seeking indoor treatment avail of public services" due to run-down infrastructure, a poor supply of drugs and equipment, and soaring rates of employee absenteeism, specified Panagariya.

  • India's status as an emerging global superpower rests on narrow economic data drawn from its booming middle class of 50 million people, less than 5 percent of the population, states OneWorld UK. Beneath this veneer, hundreds of millions of people face a daily struggle for essentials. While varying interpretations of India's poverty figures have been made by the government and anti-poverty institutions like the World Bank, it is clear that vast numbers of households survive close to the poverty line and that food price inflation poses a serious threat to India's poverty reduction. For more information on poverty, health, development, and human rights in India, see OneWorld UK's India country guide.



Barefoot health care

From: Down to Earth

by M. Suchitra 

Neighbourhood networks nurse the chronically ill in their homes

K.M. Basheer’s educational qualifications make him an unlikely leader of a medical movement. He has not studied beyond Class X. But this farmer from Nilambur in Kerala’s Malappuram district heads a society that arranges for home and neighbourhood-level care for the chronically ill. His venture, the Nilambur Palliative Care Society, has inspired several other groups.


AJEEB KOMACHI

Trained nurses on home visit

School kids, senior citizens, labourers, farmers, housewives and even policemen dress wounds, compress sores and sit with patients listening to their troubles and fears.

There are doctors as well. Since 2001, these groups of volunteers have come together under the Neighbourhood Network in Palliative Care (NNPC).

First inspirations

In 1998, Basheer, inspired by the doctor who had trained him in primary health care in a Nilambur clinic, went around his village with a group of friends, identifying the chronically ill.

"Most of them were very poor. Prolonged treatment and huge medical bills had broken their families. We had to address their financial needs as well," he recollected. Basheer and his team sought the help of local people.

Most were willing to help. In one year, he had 60 trained volunteers and the ranks swelled the following years.

The Nilambur initiative spurred on several similar societies in Malappuram and by 2000, 70% of the chronically ill in the district did not have to visit a hospital for palliative care.

NNPC today has a network of about 150 such clinics supported by 10,000 trained volunteers, 85 doctors and 270 nurses looking after about 25,000 patients at any point.

In Malappuram alone, there are 29 palliative care societies, and 25 of them have their own clinics with paid part-time doctors, auxiliary nurses and own homecare vehicles. Each unit serves four to five panchayats.

"Seventy per cent of the chronically ill in Kozhikode and Wayanad districts do not require a hospital visit for palliative care. The figures for the state are about 20%. Compare this with the rest of the country where only 2% of the chronically-ill receive home or neighbourhood care," said Anil Kumar Paleri, honorary secretary, India Association of Palliative care.

Under the community's watchful eye

"Under the watchful eyes of the community, the quality of palliative care has improved. The problem is the lack of full-time and trained doctors."

But according to K Sureshkumar who heads the Institute of Palliative Medicine in Kozhikode, "NNPC is a volunteer-driven movement, which tries to empower local communities to take care of their chronically ill. Doctors have only a secondary role in the movement".

At Sureshkumar's institute, volunteers enroll for a 16-hour training programme, which includes nursing, counselling, effective communication, clinic administration and organising awareness programmes. After completing the training, community groups of 10-15 volunteers are formed who identify the problems of the chronically ill in their area and organise necessary support for them.

Since the volunteers are from the same locality they develop strong bonds with the patients and their families. Said 42-year-old Velayudhan, paralysed waist-down, "I cannot imagine what would have happened to me without them." Many volunteers have much better administrative and organisational skills than the average health care professional, said Mathews Numpeli, NNPC's programme executive.

Though initially the programme focused on patients with advanced cancers, it now includes geriatric problems, degenerative neurological disorders, chronic infectious diseases and even chronic psychiatric disorders.

Since most of the patients are poor, volunteers often financially support their families and provide rice, provisions, clothes, books and fees for school children. "We divide the patients into very poor, poor, middle class and well-to-do groups," points out V C Ramla, a volunteer in Malappuram district for 15 years. "People from the first two groups are given all sorts of support, including monthly quota of rice. Those from the other two groups are given only medicines, nursing care and emotional support." Every service, including doctor's consultation and some medicines, is free of cost for all.

Banking on the community

Money is not a problem. Most of it comes from the community itself as small donations. Some donations are of Re 1 a day-some even less. Labourers, headload workers, auto rickshaw drivers, government employees, teachers, and even school kids make small donations to keep the movement going.

In Nilambur, for example, the four-person crew of each bus that enters the bus stand donates 50 paise a day.

Each day, roughly Rs 500 is collected from this source. Government employees contribute Rs 10 on the salary day, students save Re 1 a month and head loaders leave whatever small change they have at the end of the day. Even toddy shops have donation boxes.

"On an average, Malappuram district raises Rs 10 lakh every month," Mathews said. "The palliative care corpus has increased 10 times after NNPC was initiated," he added. Support comes in other forms too. Panchayats, municipalities and corporations contribute to the initiative.

"The Omni which we use was donated by a well-wisher," said 27-year-old T K Muhammed Younus, a marketing manager by profession, who heads the Koilandy Palliative Society in Kozhikode district.

"People support because they know they are the beneficiaries. They know the money won't be misused," he added.

Palliative care policy

In 2008, Kerala came out with a palliative care policy-the first such policy by a government at any level in Asia. The policy emphasises the community-based approach to palliative care and considers home-based care as the corner stone of the palliative care services. It highlights the need for integrating such care with primary health care.

"The emphasis is on training professionals and non professionals including volunteers, setting up palliative care services in the public sector and in the community, integrating palliative care into the activities of panchayats and making essential drugs available," said Viswas Mehta, health secretary of Kerala.

The Kerala chapter of the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) has initiated a project for the development of the community based healthcare services for bedridden, elderly, and chronically and incurably ill.

"The Rs 4-crore project is the largest palliative care project in India and the only palliative project under NRHM," said Mohammed Saif, the manager of the palliative care component of Kerala's NRHM.

"Kerala has integrated the services of 26,000-odd government-accredited health activists with the community-based palliative care units," Mehta said. NNPC's success has inspired local self-government institutions. The Malappuram district panchayat has formulated a joint home care programme with NNPC groups-Pariraksha.

This programme will support 20,000 chronically ill patients, according to Salim Karuvambalam, Health Standing Committee chairman of the district. The gram sabhas have become more active now, and the local bodies take into confidence NNPC groups while formulating health projects.

Kerala's example of palliative care has won global recognition and the who is promoting it as a model for developing countries. But can this model work in other parts of the country?

"It might not," according to Paleri. This is because Kerala has achieved total literacy and has a high level of social and political consciousness. But he suggested that the community-based efforts here could be taken as prototypes and new models could be developed in other places.

Down to Earth is a fortnightly magazine that informs and inspires people about environmental threats facing India and the world.

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Comments

I am glad i stumbled into

I am glad i stumbled into this post, it is a great insight to the kerala state. All i was aware was that kerala and its tourism value. glad to know about the people who live there.

 

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