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Mitanin Programme. Building a State-Wide Community Health Activists Programme. Objectives of the Mitanin Programme:. Improve awareness of health and health education. Improve utilisation of existing health care services Provide a measure of immediate relief to health problems.
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Mitanin Programme Building a State-Wide Community Health Activists Programme .
Objectives of the Mitanin Programme: • Improve awareness of health and health education. • Improve utilisation of existing health care services • Provide a measure of immediate relief to health problems. • Organise community ,especially women and weaker sections on health care issues • Sensitise panchayats and build capabilities
Operational Objectives • 1. Select a Mitanin in every hamlet of the state- 60,000 in all. A mitanin is a woman and -fully voluntary - selected by the community and approved by the panchayat. • 2. Train the Mitanin over 18 months- 20 days of camp based training and 30 days of on the job training at the village. • 3.Provide support to her in her work and closely coordinate with ANM and AWW for maximal effectiveness.
What are the Compulsions for a Community health volunteer? • 4000 subcenters, 26,000 villages and 54,000 hamlets- If infant mortality must fall further then in every hamlet every newborn, every diarrhoea, every ARI, every case with fever- must be seen on Day One. • Health education requires someone from within the community who knows the local idiom and perceptions,
What are the special features of the Mitanin Programme( as compared to earlier such programes) • The volunteer is a woman – and so are all her trainers( 59,000 women require approx. 2900 trainers) • The selection is hamlet/village based • The selection is through a 3 to 6 month process where the community makes the choice but facilitated by a trained prerak drawn (largely from but not necessarily) from NGOs. • While selecting a Mitanin four guidelines to remember • Preferably be a married woman • Should be able to give time( supportive family circumstance) • Preferably Should have been involved in some social work • Education not a must but preference to good literacy level
Special features of the Mitanin/ASHA Programme • Curative care is complementary and essential – but not central part of the programme. • Continued training and support for the entire duration of the programme – not merely an initial effort. • Parallel strengthening of public health systems- not a substitute to strengthening public health systems – but forms a context in which it becomes more accountable and functional. • State- civil society partnership at all levels.
Selection Problems- Who speaks for the community? • Method 1:ANMs/AWWs made selections • Method 2: Collector gives deadlines to panchayats. All sarpanches do the selection. • Method 3: The anganwadi worker and helper selected as Mitanin. • Method 4: Contracted out to NGOs- selected persons familiar/associated to them. • In each of the above situations other stakeholders reluctant to accept the Mitanin- and expectation of Mitanin is neither well informed to community or to Mitanin. Also assumes a homogenous village, where everyone would agree on a “ best person”.
Approach to selection: Facilitated Selection; • Faciliation has four aspects- • Informing the community of the programme • Ensuring that women and weaker sections are consulted in the choice.. • Ensuring that the panchayat approves the choice of the gram sabha. • Ensuring that there is enough preceding communitymobilization to generate participation and number of volunteers to choose from. Kalajathas were used extensively to convey /explain three key messages: • Peoples health in Peoples hands • Health is our right • Mitanin is a volunteer/ organiser of the community to secure the above.
Facilitating selection: • Consulation meeting between different stakeholder groups to understand programme and recommend the prereak. • Identify one prerak per cluster of villages – about 10 to 15 persons for a block. Maybe ANM/AWW worker or from NGO or from any other source by consultation amongst multiple stakeholders. • Orient them on this programme- 3 to 5 day workshop. Orientation and support helps prerak develop insights on gender, caste and power equations other than to understand programme • Ensure & monitor no.of meetings, at least 3 in each hamlet- held by prerak before final selection. • Hold some public events(kalajatha, aam sabha) to explain the programme to the public before final selection process. • Formal gram-sabha selection . • Written endorsement by panchayat. • Documents all of these, verify and then only confirm. • Block level coordination of selection by an active ICDS persons and one Active ANM/MPW and two or three NGO members or one lead NGO.
But what actually happened in Mitanin • Only 30% selected in this nine step recommended process. • But the typical four wrong types of selection – by ANM alone, by sarpanch alone or the anganwadi worker made by order or by NGO familiarity-- were less than 20% . • Even where ANM and AWW chose they chose better, with more consultation and understanding then they would have done otherwise. So in effect we have over 80% effective Mitanins. • With this approach assembly questions and political protests easily faced!!! With written panchayat endorsements. • AND PROOF---LESS THAN 5% DROPOUTS
The training programme- • First round- 4 days: Understanding Health/Health Services & Child Health And Nutrition. • Second round – 2 days- repeat • Third Round- 3 days- Womens health • Fourth Round- 2 days- Malaria and GE epidemics • Fifth Round: 4-Mitanin Drug kit and 1st contact curative care • Sixth Round: 2 days- TB& leprosy • Seventh Round:3 days- Village Level Planning
Mitanin Activities- in a normative month… • Initially visiting each household regularly for health counseling with focus on child health. Later families seeking Mitanin’s help for simple illness and Mitanin visiting families with newborn or pregnant women. ( about 6 hours per week – about 25 houses) • Attending the immunisation day once a month.( 1 day- compensated) • Attending the Mitanin cluster meeting once or twice a month.( 4 hours – half day) • Conducting village level mahila meetings once or twice a month( evening two hours) • Maintaining register • Attending the training camp – average 2 days per month.( 2 days- compensated) • Total Work Time – Uncompensated – about 6 to 8 hrs per week and Compensated: One to two days per month.
Support Activities to keep the Mitanin Programme going • Visits by Trainers, DRPs, officers, VIPs; • Cluster Meetings- with bonding activities • Training Camps- with bonding activities • Radio Programmes- weekly simultaneous broadcast twice – 14 part serial. • Public meetings of felicitation. Support, grievance redressals etc. • Village Level Planning for vector control and over all indicator based • Refilling drug kit regularly. • Good Response to Referrals: • Incentivisation- Yet to start.
Programme Structure • State level- SHRC – a state civil soceity partnership institution guided by a State Advisory Committee. Has a 30 persons training cum monitoring team. • District level- District RCH society and dt coordination committee/task force. • Also district team of 15 to 30 Dt training team. Chosen as 3 per block- 2 of whom are from NGO and one from govt and at least one woman.
Programme Structure • Block is the central unit of operation. Has appox 400 Mitanins.( 120 ASHAs). • Wide variety of block level programme organisation- from govt led to NGO led • Block coordination committee. Has one lead NGO, the BMO and per plan the block panchayat rep.as well as the three block coordinators(DRPs)
Block level programme management • Block has 15 to20 trainers one for 20 Mitanins – all women, all full time paid Rs 50 compensation per day of work. • Each trainer has to take 25 days of camp based training and to be part of training team for four mitann training camps. • Also every trainer has to visit Mitanins for on- the-job training on at least two days between two rounds of training. Approximately 20 days of work every month for 12 to 18 months.
About trainers • Trainer also conducts cluster level Mitanin meetings along with ANM/AWW • Trainers are ALL women and emerge from after the selection phase. • Trainers- preferably ,but not necessarily they may be all drawn from one NGO.
Budgetary Outlay. • Out Rs 4000 per Mitanin per year or about Rs 15 per block or about 18 crores for state: plus cost of drugs( Rs 12 crores /year for a 12 drug/20 item drug kit): plus incentives/honoraria • Rs 2600 of which is on training and support • Rs 400 on training materials and supplies • Rs 200 is on selection and mobilisation • Rs 500 is on monitoring and support. • Rs 300 is state and district adminstrative overheads • Rs 10 per capita of population plus Rs 6 per capita on drugs plus on incentives …….
What are the Mitanin outcomes? Which can be monitored? • Mitanin visits every single newborn family – on the first day of child-birth and package of six messages/practices to be ensured: Currently Over 80% change in all “performing” blocks. 2 Every pregnant woman’s family is met with in the last month—and the birth is planned for – and ANC is checked/on completed. Instiutional delivery defined by supply side problems- but ANC increase immediately apparent- no external measure available 3. Every child with diarrhoea, ARI, Fever is met with/receives appropriate home care on first day and a fair% of them get referred: “35% get adequate visits”
What are the Mitanin Programme outcomes? • Mitanin attends the Immunisation Day- which means that left out children/ women are brought in. 75% outcomes in performing blocks • Mitanin knows every malnourished child in her area and has visited them more than thrice for counseling on preventive, curative care and feeding practices. Over 75% outcomes in Performing blocks • Mitanins are functional DOTS providers- Less than 15% • Mitanins hold a hamlet level health meeting – as part of a SHG or as part of independent health committee. About 48% in performing blocks Other indicators- 84% maintaining register; 30% panchyat involvement
How does Mitanin impact on IMR? The process indicators • Four first day “life saving” visits- newborn, diarrhoea, fever and ARI • Facilitate closure of service gaps (esp. immunisation & ANC.) • Referrals- Inst. Delivery; & for sick child and neonate. • Child nutrition counseling. • 75 key messages that every family will know. Above four first day visits alone can guarantee a 40 pt. IMR decrease: The case of Jamkhed, Maharashtra
Health Status Outcomes • Rural IMR declining – from 95 to 77( over 3 years)While urban IMR remains static at 55. Main Mitanin years to be captured yet • Immunisation, ANC rates should show improvement – but external data needed • Number of institutional deliveries and skilled deliveries – internal reports show improvement but external data needed.
Further Action Needed to Strengthen Programme • Need to Build up confidence that this is a five year programme • Need External Outcome Evaluation. • Need to introduce Incentivisation. • Need to ensure regular flow of funds for sustaining training and support. • Need to strengthen drugs refill to Mitanins • Need for further innovations – Mitanin communication kit, AT kit; Ayush components, limited clinical skills, addressing social exclusion issues etc • Need to sustain/build up administrative/political support at all levels • Need to build in diversity and sustainability linkages: with sanitation, nutrition; social marketting etc.