fbpx

8910154148 | 9163228921 | info@educratias.com

A case for community-oriented health services

    NextPrevious

    A case for community-oriented health services

    India’s one million Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHA) volunteers have received World Health Organization’s Global Health Leaders Awards 2022.

    The ASHA programme was well thought through and deliberated with public health specialists and community-based organisations from the beginning.

    • Key village stakeholders selected: The ASHA selection involved key village stakeholders to ensure community ownership for the initiatives and forge a partnership.
    • Ensure familiarity: ASHAs coming from the same village where they worked had an aim to ensure familiarity, better community connect and acceptance.
    • Community’s representative: The idea of having activists in their name was to reflect that they were/are the community’s representative in the health system, and not the lowest-rung government functionary in the community.
    • Avoiding the slow process of government recruitment: Calling them volunteers was partly to avoid a painfully slow process for government recruitment and to allow an opportunity to implement performance-based incentives in the hope that this approach would bring about some accountability.

    Contribution of ASHA

    • It is important to note that even before the COVID-19 pandemic, ASHAs have made extraordinary contributions towards enabling increased access to primary health-care services; i.e. maternal and child health including immunization and treatment for hypertension etc.
    • Over the years, ASHAs have played an outstanding role in making India polio free, increasing routine immunization coverage; reducing maternal mortality; improving new-born survival and in greater access to treatment for common illnesses.

    Challenges

    • Linkages with AWW and ANM: When newly-appointed ASHAs struggled to find their way and coordinate things within villages and with the health system, their linkage with two existing health and nutrition system functionaries — Anganwadi workers (AWW) and Auxiliary Nurse Midwife (ANM) as well as with panchayat representatives and influential community members at the village level — was facilitated.
    • This resulted in an all-women partnership, or A-A-A: ASHA, AWW and ANM, of three frontline functionaries at the village level, that worked together to facilitate health and nutrition service delivery to the community.
    • No fixed salary to ASHAs: Among the A-A-A, ASHAs are the only ones who do not have a fixed salary; they do not have opportunity for career progression.
    • These issues have resulted in dissatisfaction, regular agitations and protests by ASHAs in many States of India.

    Way forward:

    • The global recognition for ASHAs should be used as an opportunity to review the programme afresh, from a solution perspective.
    • Higher remuneration: Indian States need to develop mechanisms for higher remuneration for ASHAs.
    • Avenues for career progression: It is time that in-built institutional mechanisms are created for capacity-building and avenues for career progression for ASHAs to move to other cadres such as ANM, public health nurse and community health officers are opened.
    • Extend the benefits of social sector services: Extending the benefits of social sector services including health insurance (for ASHAs and their families) should be considered.
    • Independent and external review: While the ASHA programme has benefitted from many internal and regular reviews by the Government, an independent and external review of the programme needs to be given urgent and priority consideration.

     

     

    READ MORE: Daily Prelims Booster

    READ MORE: Daily News Analysis

    Leave a Comment

    NextPrevious

    Admission open for IAS/IPS 2024-25 Exam.

    Fill this form to register for a free counselling