Column for Mathrubhumi
(Translated in Malayalam)
Link: https://english.mathrubhumi.com/features/specials/forgotten-female-frontline-workers-in-times-of-covid-19-1.4908915
Link: https://english.mathrubhumi.com/features/specials/forgotten-female-frontline-workers-in-times-of-covid-19-1.4908915
What will our lives will
be like when and if this pandemic ends? Will some kind of normality return at
some stage? These are questions everyone asks.
What is clear, however, is that what we
considered "normal" yesterday is unlikely to return for a long time
to come. The pandemic has brought with it some changes that are here to stay.
The cost of the pandemic is measured in
human lives, and in the losses to the economy and people's livelihood. Even these cannot be calculated accurately
because every day there is a change.
Around the world, places that thought they had beaten the virus are now
seeing new cases emerge.
But there are also hidden costs. We will
know of them in the years to come. And one of them has to do with women,
especially poor women.
Under the centrally-sponsored Integrated
Child Development Services (ICDS), lakhs of children under six years, and
pregnant and lactating mothers in rural areas get a hot cooked meal every day.
The efficiency of the scheme varies from state to state. Yet, often this is the only nutritious meal
these children and women get. It is a lifeline for them.
The army of women who run the anganwadis,
the backbone of the scheme, are rarely acknowledged for this crucial work they
do. We don't recognise the problems they
face as women, the burdens they carry in their own homes, how they struggle to
find the transport to get to work, or visit the families of the women and
children. They are our forgotten
frontline workers.
Today, the absence of these women is being
felt by millions of undernourished children and pregnant women.
The system has virtually broken down in
many states because of the pandemic. Due to the lockdown and the absence of
public transport, anganwadi workers are unable to go to work. As a result,
anganwadis are closed.
The daily cooked meal cannot be
prepared. State governments have
resorted to giving out dry rations instead. And pregnant women are not getting
nutritional supplements, nor are infants being vaccinated.
The packet of dry rations helps but does
not solve the problem. In tribal areas,
it is a challenge to ensure the rations reach the families. Even if they get
them, the entire family shares the food. With women socialised to eat last, and
least, a pregnant woman is unlikely to get the nutrition she needs.
This state of affairs, stretched over many
months, will have a direct impact on the health of these children and women.
The exact extent of this will only be known a year or so down the line when
surveys establish the extent of child malnutrition and mortality as well as
maternal mortality.
This is tragic because with all its faults,
the ICDS has been a central part of improving the health of women and children,
especially in rural areas. India's
statistics on child mortality and nutrition as well as maternal mortality have
improved, although some states like UP and MP continue to lag behind.
It is equally worrying that in cities, like
Mumbai for instance, the same thing is happening. In slums, anganwadis have closed down. There are no hot meals. Pregnant women, who would earlier have been
fairly confident of accessing a hospital for delivery, are now worried about
infection, and the lack of available hospital beds.
Such women include many who are married to
workers from other states. These men
have no work, and no money. The women are not in a condition to travel and
return to their villages. They live in dense slums without basic facilities of
water and sanitation. What happens to such women during this time?
It is time to think about these hidden
costs, and these forgotten frontline workers.
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