बुधवार, 10 फ़रवरी 2016

ON NATIONAL DEWORMING DAY TODAY

Ministry of Health and Family Welfare launches 'National Deworming Day'


New Delhi, Feb 9 : The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare today launched the first 'National Deworming Day'-a massive school-based deworming effort in twelve states scheduled for Feb 10.

Jagat Prakash Nadda, Union Minister for Health and Family Welfare inaugurated the national program, in Jaipur, Rajasthan, together with Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje and Rajendra Rathore, Minister for Health and Family Welfare, Government of Rajasthan, in the presence of senior officials from the Central and State Government.

National Deworming Day is a groundbreaking initiative focused on reducing the threat of parasitic worm infections, a widespread health issue affecting over 241 million children in India alone. 


India has the highest burden of soil-transmitted helminths--parasitic worms--in the world. Parasitic worms in children interfere with nutrient uptake, and can contribute to anemia, malnourishment, and impaired mental and physical development. 

According to the 2012 report 'Children in India', published by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, Govt. of India, 48pc of children under the age of 5 years are stunted and 19.8pc are wasted, indicating that half of the country's children are malnourished.

Jagat Prakash Nadda said, "The early years of a child are the most critical and significant. I am confident that if the comprehensive set of actions identified in National Deworming Day Guidelines is fully implemented, children will have improved health outcomes and be able to achieve their potential to the fullest."

Mass, school-based deworming is safe, cost-effective, and can scale to millions of schools quickly. Deworming has been shown to reduce absenteeism in schools, improve learning outcomes, and increase the likelihood of higher wage jobs later in life. The timely, high quality, mass-based deworming programme for children of pre-school and school age children in India will dramatically reduce the harm caused by parasitic worm infections in millions of children in India. The Government of India is launching a fixed one-day school-based program to ensure intensive deworming coverage and targeted outreach. Community mobilization efforts are also undertaken to engage community-based health workers and other local institutions.

Albendazole was orally administered to pre-school and school-going children ages 1-19 years in government schools and anganwadi centres across the states of Assam, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Haryana, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu and Tripura. The National Deworming Day campaign treated an initial 140 million children at risk for parasitic worms in schools and anganwadi centres with schoolteachers and anganwadi workers administering the drugs. In line with any mass-based public health initiative, stringent adverse event protocols are put in place with teachers, anganwadi workers, health officials trained to respond as needed.

Priya Jha, Director of India Programs for Evidence Action's Deworm the World Initiative said, "Periodic deworming of children together with improved water, sanitation and health education, can significantly reduce the prevalence and detrimental health impacts of parasitic worms in children."

Evidence Action is the technical partner to the Government of India for National Deworming Day. Evidence Action currently works with state governments in Delhi, Bihar, Rajasthan, and Madhya Pradesh, supporting the roll-out of National Deworming Day. In the last school year 2013/14, 30 million children were dewormed with Evidence Action's technical support. Evidence Action works around the world to rapidly scale up national school-based deworming programs.

http://www.newkerala.com/news/2015/fullnews-17215.html


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