Fighting Malnutrition Through Child Care in India
Organization | Seva Mandir |
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Region | India |
Website | Website |
ProjectLeader | Ronak Shah |
Linked Problems & Solutions
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Very young children in the poorest tribal villages of southern Rajasthan are often left at home alone or with young siblings whilst their parents work. They lack adequate care, safety and nourishing food, resulting in malnutrition and ill-health. Seva Mandir's day care (balwadi) programme addresses these issues by offering a safe, loving environment, nutritious meals and supplements for children from birth to 5 years old, for six hours a day, six days a week.
Challenge
Difficult and dangerous hilly terrain and long distances from government run child-care centres mean that many small children are left at home or accompany their mothers to the fields whilst they work. Where there are government daycare, they are often poorly run and do not cover hours or ages for pre-school care. Without adequate food and stimulating surroundings many of these children fall sick, are anemic, or become malnourished and are unlikely to go to school at all in the future.
Long-Term Impact
The young children receive nourishing food and supplements, health monitoring, activity-based learning and simple hygiene and sanitation practices. Mothers are happy to leave their children in safety whilst they work and are counselled on diet and health, which results in less malnutrition and illness. The children become more socially aware and more likely to join mainstream education. There are currently 186 daycare centres (balwadis) covering 4,500 children in remote rural areas.
References
- http://www.sevamandir.org
- http://www.sevamandir.org
- http://www.facebook.com/sevamandir
- http://friendsofsevamandir.org/
- http://www.sevamandirfriends.org/
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