Tuesday, 19 November 2013

ATTAPADY-THE DARKER SIDE OF KERALA



                     

Talking endlessly about human development would be worthless and incomplete without quoting Mahbub ul Haq whose brainchild was the Human Development Report. According to him, development is to be understood in terms of the people and each activity is to be analyzed to see how much people participate in it and benefit from it. He supports that kind of development which puts people at the centre stage. When we think about human development, children are a section which should not be neglected. To borrow the words of the former U.S. President Herbert Hoover, ‘children are our most valuable resource’. It should not be forgotten that the very destiny of our nation is dependent on this growing generation. Children need extra care since they are our supreme assets and the human resource for the days to come. It should be remembered that if they are not treated properly, their futures would end up in danger. Health is a major factor in the phase of growth of a child and if the children are denied the opportunity to enjoy nutritious food, the condition will be worse than what we can imagine. This report throws light on child malnutrition in the Indian state of Kerala, focusing the specific case of Attappady, a tribal block in the Palakkad district.  Various reports show that the current level of malnutrition in India is unacceptably high. According to UNICEF, malnutrition is more common in India than in the Sub-Saharan Africa. One in every 3 malnourished children in the world lives in India and the levels of malnutrition varies across different states here.  The state of Kerala has a high literacy rate (including female literacy), improved health infrastructure, better nutritional achievements etc. and this is reflected in the various indicators of development. Kerala has performed well in spite of its comparatively lower per capita income. Though there are many reasons to boast of the achievements by Kerala, it should be noted that the development of the state is uneven. Attappady, being one of the largest tribal settlements in the state is one such pocket which suggests that something is wrong in Kerala too. But Keralites, when talking about the grandeur of their homeland, which is known by the sobriquet ‘God’s own country’, fail to realize the plight of people living in the tribal areas. Attappady had been in news since many years for the child deaths which occurred here due to malnutrition.  The infant mortality rate here is 66 per 1000 against the state figure of 14.1 and the maternal mortality rate is 7 per 1000 compared with the state figure of 1.3 per 1000. Many cases of child and women deaths in the area often go unreported. It would not be wrong in saying that most of the people here are deprived of even a hand to mouth existence. They face many challenges and hardships to make both the ends meet. People (even children) are seen begging for alms to have a meal and the scenes of this kind are pitiful. NDTV news featuring Attappady gives it a title- 'The land of dying infants and weeping wombs'.  The reasons behind these deaths, keeping aside the protein malnutrition are many and the ones to be stressed are as follows



   Premature delivery of the infants
·        Poor or improper health facilities
·        High incidence of maternal anaemia
·        Ineffective functioning of the health and social welfare departments and government hospitals.
·        Deliveries by people with no or ill medical knowledge i.e., fewer institutional deliveries.





The most saddening part is that the people with sickle-cell anaemia do not get proper treatment and the children with this disease die in their early childhood unless they receive medical attention. Over and above the issue of low incomes for the jobs available, unemployment adds to the existing woes of the Attappady people, too many of whom are undernourished and sick. The farmers here, who earlier owned their own land, have declined into poverty, allegedly after the land mafia occupied their land. The worst affected were the women and children.  Most of the Attapadi tribals don’t have cultivatable land since the lost their lands.  Now Attapadi has nearly 260 landless tribal families. This brought about a change in their food habits and lifestyles too. Earlier they used to eat rich nutritious food cultivated in their farms. Now they eat substandard rice provided by ration shops for Rs.1 a kg.
Newspaper reports show that 38 infants had died from January to august this year in Attappady. And it is known that the total number of deaths is around 60, taking the case of the last one and half years. Various surveys conducted in the region reveals that all the children here suffer from varying degrees of malnutrition. Adding to this, another survey showed that 98 per cent of pregnant women in the village are malnourished, which in turn results in underweight babies, many of whom are malnourished and are likely to die within a few years of birth.  There are even sexual abuses in these tribal regions which give rise to unwed mothers. But such cases are prevalent in regions of Wayanad district of Kerala. And also, Attappadi girls get married at an early age. They might not be aware of the fact that negative health consequences are linked to early marriage.  Early marriage is associated with early child bearing. Studies show that the risk of death following pregnancy is twice great for women between 15-19 years than for those between 20-25 years. Maternal mortality rate can be up to 5 times higher in the age group 10-14 years. According to UNICEF, the infant mortality among the children of very young mothers is higher than those among older peers. Like the children here these young mothers also do not get proper nutritious food. It would not be wrong in saying that acute protein deficiency in the diet of adolescent girls, pregnant women and lactating mothers is one of these primary issues behind these child deaths. It should be noted that abortion rates among tribal women is also on the rise. Very few tribal women attend neonatal clinics and visit the hospital for delivery. Their personal hygiene is also poor. Malnutrition and poor hygiene are also factors leading to the high rate of abortions.
All of us would be aware of the Integrated Child Development Services scheme (ICDS) aims at improving the nutritional and health status of children in the age group below 6 years. It also focuses on reducing the indices of mortality, morbidity and school dropouts. Providing a package of services to children below six years and to pregnant and nursing mothers, such as supplementary nutrition, immunization, health check-ups, referral services and pre-primary education also come under the objectives of the scheme. Child care centers called ‘Anganwadis’ which form the backbone of the ICDS scheme are also located in these tribal hamlets. But they are providing nutritious foods like milk, eggs, banana etc. Being a resident of Kerala, I have seen the way anganwadis function in other rural areas, which are comparatively better off than Attappady. All they provide is upma and green gram. So, the case with Attappady on which the Government doesn’t show much concern can be guessed. The poor people who remain trapped in the web of poverty and malnutrition are not asking the Anganwadis to conduct educational meetings and offer advice about nutrition or family planning, as done in some other parts of the country. But the people feel that these child care centers have the obligation of providing nutritious food atleast. Though there are three government primary health centers (PHC), one community health centre (CHC) and 27 subcentres in this area, they are not providing sufficient medical facilities. There is lack of medical staff and the ones who are there do not have proper qualification. The Kerala government provides the people ragi which is their staple food. But that is in vain because of the unavailability of grinding mills and lack of proper transport facilities.
It is to be kept in mind that malnutrition limits development and the capacity to learn. It also costs lives: about 50 per cent of all childhood deaths are attributed to malnutrition. Malnutrition in children is not affected by food intake alone; it is also influenced by access to health services, quality of care for the child and pregnant mother as well as good hygiene practices Malnutrition in early childhood has serious, long-term consequences because it impedes motor, sensory, cognitive, social and emotional development. Malnourished children are less likely to perform well in school and more likely to grow into malnourished adults, at greater risk of disease and early death. Here we have seen the case of Attappady. There are hundreds of Attappadys around us, which many a time go unnoticed and do not get proper attention of the Government. So the states should be pressed to take initiatives to provide better health care and education, not only for the children but for the parents too. Common practices such as allowing all the males of the household to eat first goes some way to explaining the 83 per cent rate of iron deficiency anaemia among Indian women. The trend in Kerala is also not different and we have known this from the instance of Jayamma in Martha.C.Nussbaum’s ‘Women and development’.  Kerala might aspire to attain the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) of eradicating hunger and poverty, reducing child and maternal mortality etc. but unless these areas are seriously taken, there may not be any change in the conditions prevailing in the darker sides of Kerala. So it is essential to make some necessary steps from the part of government to make the state bereft of child problems and death. Let us hope that there will be a qualitative change in the situation soon. 



                                                                                                                                               

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