From Monday, pregnant women, new moms to get hot meals
By Express News Service |
Published: 27th September 2017 03:23 AM |
Last Updated: 27th September 2017 07:28 AM | A+A A- |
BENGALURU:
A maternal nutrition scheme, ‘Mathrupoorna’, which will provide one
freshly cooked meal to pregnant and lactating mothers, will be launched
on October 2. The scheme will replace the take-home meals that were
being offered as part of the supplementary nutrition programme under the
Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS).
Under
this programme, pregnant and breastfeeding mothers will be given one
full meal during the day consisting of rice, dal, lentils, vegetables,
boiled egg, peanut (chikki) and milk for a minimum of 25 days every
month. The women will also be given iron, folic acid and calcium tablets
along with the meal. The one meal will be of 1,342 calories and will
meet up to 45 per cent of the recommended daily nutritional need. The
meal will be served at local anganwadis. Similar schemes are already
being implemented in Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra.
A
pilot project was conducted in February at Manvi, H D Kote, Jamkhandi
and Madhugiri taluks, where 36,000 women were covered under the scheme.
The scheme is expected to benefit 12 lakh women in the state. Since the
meals will be cooked at anganwadis, the Department of Women and Child
Development (DWCD) has decided that meals served to children (3-6 years)
will also be the same so that meals do not have to cooked twice.
Keeping
in mind the restrictions placed on new mothers, meals will be allowed
to be taken home 30 days before delivery and 45 days after. In coastal
areas like Uttara Kannada and Udupi, where anganwadis are far away, DWCD
is considering allowing women to take the meals home.
Principal
Secretary to DWCD Uma Mahadevan said surveys held in the past decade
had shown that malnutrition, stunted growth and wasting has not reduced
much in children who do not have access to better facilities. “We
realised that to address the issue, it is not sufficient to focus on the
child alone, but also on the mother. Most of the women are anaemic and
calcium deficient before pregnancy and this contributes to poor health
of the child and in the long term, poorer prospects of leading a better
life,” she said.
While the DWCD will
focus on providing the meal, the Health and Family Welfare Department,
through ASHA workers and Auxiliary Nurse Midwives, will record their
development through mother and child tracking software, check
haemoglobin content and also counsel on birth preparedness.
Several issues to cover
The
successful implementation of the scheme which follows a life-cycle
approach, with focus on the mother and the child too stands a better
chance, depending on how DWCD manages several problems. There is some
resistance among anganwadi workers who feel they are not able to
concentrate on their core function as they are being frequently drawn
into other works like surveys and census. While stress is also being
laied on construction of toilets to prevent diarrhoea and other
infections, encouraging women and children to use the toilets when water
is a scarce commodity in north Karnataka is also a challenge. In
addition, the DWCD also has been unable to tackle child marriages
satisfactorily, despite conducting awareness campaigns. Also, younger
anaemic mothers have a higher rate of maternal mortality and also give
birth to underweight children. Whether families are willing to let these
young mothers have access to these meals is yet to be seen.
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