ASHA WORKERS PROBLEMS
Beena
K. tries to blink away the tears clouding her eyes when she recalls her “tough”
first year as an Accredited Social Health Activist (ASHA) worker in Feroke
panchayat in Kozhikode over five years ago.The 42-year-old homemaker worked
with the Department of Health and Family Welfare’s Mahila Swasthya Sangh
programme, intervening in early-age marriages to picking leprosy patients off
the road, before she was recommended by the panchayat to the National Rural
Health Mission’s ASHA programme in September 2007.“The harder I worked in the
field, the worse became the harassment from junior health officials. It was
tough, and I answered them by working all the more in the field. Gradually, the
people started trusting me. There came a time when parents would not allow
their children to be vaccinated unless I was there,” Ms. Beena said.
But she
is gradually losing hope. There is a certain despondency written on her face.
The monthly honorarium of Rs.500 the government had fixed for over 30,000 ASHA
workers is already seven months late. So are performance-based incentives such
as Rs.20 for each vaccination and Rs.100 for registering a palliative patient.On
the other hand, work has increased manifold over the years.“When we were
recruited, we were told that it will be 1,000 people per ASHA worker. Now, each
of us has about 400 houses under our care. This is because a lot of ASHA
workers are leaving as they were unable to afford the erratic payment of
honorarium and incentives,” Asiya K.T., an ASHA worker from Ramanattukara
panchayat, said.They, all women aged between 25 and 45, form the bridge between
the community, especially the rural poor, and the public health sector.
Their
services range from monitoring waste disposal to prevention and control of
communicable diseases, palliative care, nutrition, community-based mental
health programmes and registering cancer and HIV/AIDS patients for health care.“We
get the honorarium once in six months or a year, though we have to be paid on a
monthly basis. These women, whose work over the years has seen a marked
decrease in infant mortality rate and improvement in maternal health in the
State, are treated with no respect. A Union Budget hike in our honorarium to
Rs.700 has not yet been implemented,” Krishnaveni Sharma, State general
secretary of the Kerala Pradesh ASHA Workers Congress, said.Ms. Sharma said it
would mean a lot for the ASHA workers if their honorariums were paid every
month.Ushakumari K.L., who joined ASHA after stints as a Kudumbasree health
volunteer and anganwadi staffer, said she often ended up paying from her pocket
for tea and snacks for patients she collected for attending medical camps.“Our
work within the community has helped us gain the confidence of the people. We
have learnt to be public persons.“Those who snubbed us as women who did not
stay at home now respect us for what we do,” pointed out Nusrath T, an ASHA
worker and Feroke panchayat member.
Prof. John Kurakar
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