Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums

by DIR (Developing Indigenous Resources)
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums
Reduce childhood malnutrition in Indian slums

Project Report | May 19, 2014
Saving lives with boiled water, sugar and salt

By Marilyn Smith and Shalini Sahai | Project Leaders

Health Promoter Sushma with Samir and his mother
Health Promoter Sushma with Samir and his mother

According to World Health Organization estimates, diarrheal disease is the second leading cause of death in children under five years; globally, it is responsible for killing 760,000 children every year. Diarrhea is also the major cause of malnutrition in children under five years old.

A significant proportion of diarrheal disease can be prevented through safe drinking water and adequate sanitation and hygiene.

But water is a serious problem in Janta Colony. Poor maintenance of limited drainage systems leads to back-up of waste water. Within steps of every doorway, non-biodegradable matter floats atop fermenting organic waste while a variety of insects, including malaria-bearing mosquitoes, skim the surface.

The most prevalent risk for bustee children is contracting diarrheal diseases from poor hygiene, contaminated food or dirty water. For infants and toddlers, severe dehydration can spiral downward to death in a matter of hours.

Samir, the second of three children in a family that lives in Janta Colony, caught the attention of DIR Health Promoter Sushma. At nine months of age, Samir contracted diarrhea and started to lose weight. Not knowing what else to do, his parents went to local practitioners for treatment. But his condition only worsened.

Sushma finally persuaded Samir's parents to take him to a nearby hospital where he was diagnosed with marasmus, a severe state of malnutrition in which body weight plummets to less than 60% of expected body weight for age.

Once the crisis was passed and Samir was back home, Sushma advised his parents to start using the home-made oral rehydration solution (ORS) to counteract the loss of fluids caused by diarrhea.

DIR makes it a priority to teach at least one person in each family, how to prepare an ORS from basic kitchen ingredients: boiled water, salt, sugar and some lime juice. This allows families to react quickly when diarrhea occurs, without spending the 15 rupees charged by local shops for manufactured powders.

As Samir recovered, Sushma also counseled his parents about adequate nutrition for all of their children. Gradually, Samir started gaining weight, and is now a healthy child of 2.5 yrs.

Your support makes it possible for DIR to save children like Samir.

Thank you!

 

Shalini Sahai

Marilyn Smith 

Waste water overflowing into bustee streets
Waste water overflowing into bustee streets
Street demonstration of how to make ORS
Street demonstration of how to make ORS

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Organization Information

DIR (Developing Indigenous Resources)

Location: El Cerrito, CA - USA
Website:
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DIR (Developing Indigenous Resources)
Shalini Sahai
Project Leader:
Shalini Sahai
El Cerrito , CA United States

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This project is no longer accepting donations.
 

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