Television engendered development

BY Swapna Majumdar| IN Media Practice | 22/05/2008
In Chhattisgarh villages Kalyani clubs based on a bi-weekly television programme are transforming lives.
SWAPNA MAJUMDAR reports. Pix: In Raveli village local Kalyani club President, Sunita Vishwakarma had used the messages printed on ration cards to teach her daughter about health and hygiene. (WFS)

 

                                 Womens Feature Service

 

In Kunra, a small village in Raipur district of Chhattisgarh, a group of women were so inspired by Kalyani, a bi-weekly television programme on health produced by Doordarshan, that they decided to get together to tackle illness and disease in their village.

 

Not knowing how to go about it, they approached the producer of the programme who suggested the idea of forming a Kalyani club that would carry forward and implement

Kalyani¿s messages on health.

 

In 2006, four years after the club was started, the number of cases of diarrhea, a major childhood illness in the village (and state), have declined. The incidence of malaria is on the back foot and more children are brought in for polio and other vaccinations regularly.

 

"We did this because we wanted our children to grow up in a healthy environment. There hasn¿t been a single case of malaria in the past two years and even officials of our community health centre have publicly admitted that it wouldn¿t have been possible without the Kalyani club," says Suniti Sahu 35, proud president of the Kunra Kalyani club.

 

In fact, when women of the neighboring villages heard about how the Kalyani club had engendered development and improved health indicators, they were galvanized into forming similar clubs. So far, 300 clubs, each with a membership of at least 25 women, have been formed in the 16 districts of Chhattisgarh.

 

"The clubs have become an integral part of the lives of women. It is really exciting to see how they have become catalysts of change," says Usha Bhasin, concept and series director of Kalyani.

 

Kalyani, which means "benedictions from a Goddess", is broadcast in nine states creating health awareness about malaria, tuberculosis, tobacco, reproductive health, sanitation, hygiene and HIV/AIDS. The programme is produced in partnership with the Ministry of Health, Ministry of Family Welfare and the National AIDS Control Organization (NACO).

 

Bhasin, who heads the development communication division of ¿Doordarshan¿, says the objective of forming Kalyani clubs was to give a platform to women, particularly those who had never stepped out of their homes, to participate in the process of development. "The concept of Kalyani clubs was part of the communication strategy of the Kalyani programme started in 2002. We know that as a medium we can enter into the houses of people but we need support to sustain the messages. It was important to have partners in the field to keep hammering the health messages and the women of the Kalyani clubs have done that in their own innovative ways," she points out.

 

A novel tactic adopted by Sunita Vishwakarma, 28, president of Kalyani club in village Raveli of district Durg, was to get the health messages printed on the cover of ration cards. "All our members are housewives like me and use ration cards. So it was a simple and effective way of getting everyone in the house to see the messages," she reveals.

 

But Vishwakarma did not stop at ration cards. Having heard of the programme that her district had the highest prevalence of HIV in the state, the club members knew they had to stop families from following the traditional practice of tattooing. They knew it would be difficult but went door-to-door explaining how HIV could be transmitted through unsterilized needles used for tattooing. It took several months and repeated visits before the practice was disbanded. "It was a big achievement for us. We were able to inform them about HIV and AIDS without creating stigma," adds Vishwakarma.

 

In addition to dealing sensitively with the issue of HIV and AIDS, Kalyani clubs have been effective in ensuring special care is given to pregnant and lactating mothers. There has been a decrease in infant and maternal mortality across the state thanks to their efforts. Club members have persuaded nurses at the primary health care centre to pay special attention and get women to opt for institutional deliveries.

 

According to Dr Meena Baghel, gynecologist at the Hathbandh village community health centre, very few women would consider institutional deliveries as an option. "Earlier women used the water of cow dung to induce labour pain. After the women of Kalyani clubs got into action, pregnant women came to the health centre or hospital. Maternal mortality and infant mortality has gone down thanks to the influence of the programme and the club and the number of institutional deliveries has increased by 20-30 per cent in a period of two to three years," she says.

 

In fact, according to the current national family health survey-3 (NFHS-3), in Chhattisgarh, mothers who had at least three antenatal visits for their last birth has increased to 54.7 per cent from 33.2 per cent (NFHS-2), while institutional births increased from 13.8 (NFHS-2) to 15.7 per cent. This assumes significance given that the maternal mortality ratio (MMR) in Chhattisgarh is 379 as compared to the national figure of 301 and infant mortality rate (IMR) is 61 compared to the national figure of 57 per 1,000 live births (Ministry of Health and Family welfare, 2007).

 

"Although all the credit for these figures cannot be given to Kalyani clubs, some part of it can certainly be attributed to them", says Pradeep Pathak, producer of ¿Kalyani¿, Raipur Doordarshan. This is because at least one member of the Kalyani club is a ¿mitanins¿, or community health worker. "We asked the club members to include one ¿mitanin¿. This was an integral part of the strategy to enable these clubs to provide health services. In villages where there are no ¿mitanins¿, the club selects one member for training. This way, both their credibility and skill increases," says Pathak.

 

In village Kandarka, villagers have begun to consider Kalyani club members equivalent to medical doctors. When Deepmala, 24, was in a dilemma over whether or not she should try for a son, she sought the advice of Kalyani club members. Her belief in the club grew when her grandmother-in-law Bhanuvati Vishwakarma, 70, told her to go in for an operation, after the birth of her second daughter because she had heard from club members that a daughter was as good as a son and that there was just no need to risk her health trying for a son.

 

Dhaneshwari Thakur, 21, an agricultural labourer in Raveli village says that if it wasn¿t for the persistence of Kalyani club members who ensured timely vaccinations during her second pregnancy, she may not have been able to deliver a healthy child.

 

According to the NFHS-3, the percentage of fully immunized children has doubled in the last five years, increasing to 48.7 per cent from 21.8 per cent (NFHS-2). The number of children (under three years) breastfed within one hour of birth has also registered an increase: from 21.6 per cent to 24.5 per cent.

 

Whether it is in villages plagued by internal strife, like Dantewada, or underdeveloped villages, like Bastar, Kalyani clubs are transforming lives. Today, over 10,000 women are using the Kalyani club platform to anchor change in the state.