1 / 18

Presentation by Dr. Shaileshkumar Sutariya, M.D.(CM) State Nodal Officer (Adolescent Health)

Health & Family Welfare Department Government of Gujarat. School Health Programme. Presentation by Dr. Shaileshkumar Sutariya, M.D.(CM) State Nodal Officer (Adolescent Health) Health & Family Welfare Department, Govt of Gujarat. Beneficiaries Bouquet “Newborn to 18 Years”.

norton
Download Presentation

Presentation by Dr. Shaileshkumar Sutariya, M.D.(CM) State Nodal Officer (Adolescent Health)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Health & Family Welfare Department Government of Gujarat School Health Programme Presentation by Dr. Shaileshkumar Sutariya, M.D.(CM) State Nodal Officer (Adolescent Health) Health & Family Welfare Department, Govt of Gujarat

  2. Beneficiaries Bouquet “Newborn to 18 Years” Covers more than 1.55 CroresChildren , about 26 % of total Population (1,01,301) New born to 6 years Angan- WadiChildren 38,57,769 (50,382) Non School going children 95,386 Primary School Children 91,63,123 (41,411) Secondary and Higher Secondary School Children 24,75,515 (9,508) Children/ Juvenile Home etc 380 Madressa 12088

  3. Services Bouquet - Primary Healthcare to Super- Specialty Healthcare • Health Screening and Medical check up based on 4D’s: Defects at Birth, Diseases, Deficiencies and Disabilities • Health & Referral Card • Primary care on spot • Free Spectacles • Referral Services for Secondary and Tertiary care • Super-Specialty treatment for Heart , Kidney and Cancer Disease including Renal Transplant • Health and Life-Skills education Micro Planning and Management

  4. Systematic Methodology and Robust Documentation

  5. Technology Driven Program E mail Phone Monitoring by PMCC SMS Video Conference Online module • Web-based Application http://shp.guj.nic.in

  6. SHP to School Health Week: A Flagship Programme Sanitation Day Jointly by Department of - Panchayat, Water Supply and Forest Nutrition Day Jointly by Department of Health & Women and Child Development DAY 1 3 2 Health Screening Day Jointly by Health and Education Department

  7. School Health Week 70 Days Long Programme in The State Medical Check -up DayJointly by Department of Health & Education Cultural & Celebration Day Jointly by Health Education Panchayat & Rural dev. 4 5 DAY

  8. Outcomes- Primary Healthcare 2011-12 & 2012-13

  9. Outcomes: Referral Secondary Healthcare 2011-12 & 2012-13

  10. Outcomes: Referral Super-Specialty Healthcare Services

  11. Community Awareness And Participation Activities In 2011-12 & 2012-13

  12. Media Coverage Landscape

  13. Commitment to Social and Economic Gains to Society Socio-Economic Impact: • Inclusive child healthcare based on Social Equity. • All SC and ST children get quality and expensive treatment of catastrophic diseases free of Cost. • Substantial reduction of health burden leading to Healthy Society and Prosperous Nation. Sustainability: • Demand generation from the community due to Awareness, Acceptance and Participation. • Mass support and Community Ownership • Political commitment. • Continuous training, capacity building & improvisation based upon experience and feedback.

  14. Unique Features- School Health Week (Festival)

  15. External Evaluation by Datamation Ltd. New Delhi • Observations • by NCPCR Team* • Widely accessible communication network; • Easily retrievable health data; • Thorough micro-planning for the entire project; • Designated referral centers for the screened out children • Levels of awareness among the students in Schools - 99.5%. • Levels of awareness in Madrassa -100% • Level of satisfaction of the treatment facility -97.9% • Parents attended school health program activities -66.2% • Schools provided Health educations- 98.4% • PRI members suggesting continuation of the SHP-96.8% • Suggestions: • Mechanism to follow-up of the referral children can be devised • Other chronic diseases and Nutrition problems might be addressed • Allocation of facilities under the scheme needs to be increased • Frequency of school health week can be increased from once in a year to twice in year *Team led by Prof. ShanthaSinha, Chairperson of National Commission for Protection of Child Rights in Dec, 2010

  16. Way Forward • Expansion of Super Specialty Services namely- Cochlear Implant , Liver Transplant including Tertiary Club Foot Treatment. • Convergence and Integration with SarvaShikshaAbhiyan (SSA) of Education Deptt for name based tracking and follow-up. • Convergence and Integration with Gujarat State Nutrition Mission (GSNM) to track and combat Malnutrition Prevalence in a targeted manner. • Convergence with Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram (RBSK) for Child Health Screening and Early Intervention Services through dedicated Mobile Health Teams.

  17. Stories Defining Program Success Tribal & Orphaned Child “LaluHalpati”becameblind due to cataract. Hegot his vision back and ray of hope for bright future through SHP initiatives Before After

  18. THANKS schoolhealthgujarat@gmail.com

More Related