Title: COMMUNITY BASED REHABILITATION
1- COMMUNITY BASED REHABILITATION
2Introduction
- 600 million disabled in the world
- 15-20 of poor in developing world
- Disabled often stigmatized and excluded
- Dependent on others for physical, social and
economic support - Increasing numbers because of conflicts, wars
accidents violence
3- Disabled are disproportionately poor and the
poor disproportionately disabled - Disability is not merely an attribute of the
individual but a complex social and environmental
construct imposed largely by societal attitudes
and the limitation of the manmade environment
4Definition
- A strategy within community development for the
rehabilitation, equalization of opportunities and
social integration of all people with
disabilities....
5- CBR is any activity which results from decision
made by the community and their disabled persons
in particular and which aims to enable disabled
persons to gain more for themselves and their
children of what they want and need...
6Concepts of CBR
- Awareness and concern of the community
- Initiatives from the community
- Planning by the community
- Implementation by the community
- Evaluation by the community
- Modification by the community
- Resources of the community
- Benefits to the community
7Common goals of CBR programs
- Empower disabled persons
- Inclusion of disabled persons in their home
communities. - Facilitate early childhood education.
- Elimination of barriers, both physical and
social. - Education of all disabled children.
- Improving health of disabled persons.
- Improving job skills for economic independence.
8Scope of CBR
- Prevention of disabilities
- Earlier detection of disabilities and management
- Assessment of the felt needs of the disabled and
family - Individualised learning programmes
- Home based or neighbourhood centre based
programmes - Parental involvement
- Organisations of disabled people
- Equity and equalization of opportunities
- Social integration
9CHRISTIAN MEDICAL COLLEGES CONTRIBUTION TO
COMMUNITY ('S) HEALTH
- 1906 ROADSIDE CLINIC
- 1947 KAVANUR HEALTH CENTRE
- 1954 DEPT OF PREVENTIVE SOCIAL MEDICINE
- 1955 RURAL HEALTH CENTRE
- 1977 RUHSA
10- 1978 CODES
- 1986 EPIDEMIOLOGY RESOURCE CENTRE
- 1996 CONDUCTING INTERNATIONAL TRAINING
PROGRAMS - 1998 WHO - SEARO AWARD FOR PHC
- 2001 WHO COLLABORATING CENTRE FOR CBE
11STRATEGY
- PROVIDE HEALTH SERVICES WHICH ARE
- ACCESSIBLE
- AFFORDABLE
- ACCEPTABLE
- INTEGRATED -INCLUDES PREVENTIVE, PROMOTIVE ,
CURATIVE AND REHABILITATION - COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
- EFFECTIVE REFERRAL SYSTEM
12SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS
- CRÈCHES
- WOMENS CLUBS
- SELF HELP GROUPS
- HANDICRAFT CENTRES
- WOMEN'S WELDING
- TAILORING EMBROIDERY
- AUTOMOBILE
- TRANSPORT
- FAMILY COUNSELLING CENTRE
13TRAINING
- RECOGNISED BY SEVERAL FOREIGN UNIVERSITIES FOR
PROVIDING TRAINING - PRIMARY HEALTH CARE
- COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
- INTERNATIONAL HEALTH
- TRAVEL MEDICINE
- RCH
- RECOGNISED BY WHO AS A WHO COLLABORATING CENTRE
IN CBE AND PHC
14RUHSA Population 120,000 K V Kuppam
Block Started in 1977
SERVICES Health Social Development
Agriculture Animal Husbandry Economic
Development
Rural Unit for Health Social Affairs
15Set up in 1982 for Primary Secondary care of
the poor in Vellore Town Special focus on Urban
slums
Urban Community Health Services covers Vellore
block and adjoining areas
Low Cost Effective Care Unit
16- Aims to
- provide low cost high quality primary secondary
medical care for the poor of Vellore - Done by
- delivering outreach services and health education
in poor urban areas - operating a good referral system from primary to
tertiary care with appropriate follow-up - working with other GO NGOs to improve the
health of the community
17URBAN COMMUNITY HEALTH SERVICES
- Volunteer based services for the general
population
Health education
First aid referral services
General health screening camp
18URBAN COMMUNITY HEALTH SERVICES
- Need based services for people with
disabilities using volunteers from the community
19Covers 119,000 population in Kanniyambadi
Provides services also to adjoining block of
Anaicut
CHAD - Community Health Development
20The Community Health and Development (CHAD)
programme
- Providing primary health care to a population of
just over 100,000, spread out in the 82 villages
of Kaniyambadi block. - Basic health care in the village provided by
Part Time Community Health Workers (PTCHW the
Traditional Dai trained by CHAD), under the
supervision of the Health Aides (also a trained
woman from the village). The Health Aides in turn
are supervised by the Community Health Nurses and
a doctor. - Monthly mobile clinics conducted in each village
by a doctor-led team. During these clinics, 3 4
villages are visited and 75-100 people are
treated for ailments. - Preventive health care such as immunization for
children and antenatal checks for pregnant
mothers.
21Identification of differently abled
- Health Aides visit the villages every week and
Nurses every two weeks. - During these visits, they seek out persons with
disabilities and report them to the Occupational
Therapist (OT) at CHAD. - The OT then arranges for a home visit for
assessment - After assessment, a treatment plan is drawn up
for all those with disabilities. - A database is maintained of all potential
beneficiaries.
22In the community
- Seventy percent of the identified disabled are
treated in the community by the occupational
therapist who trains the disabled person(s) or
member(s) of the family. - Other members of the team are called on to see
the disabled person as the situation demands - . If additional care is required the disabled
person is referred to CHAD and/or CMC through
established channels. - By involving local school teachers and balwadi
workers, attempts are made at integrating
disabled children into balwadis and schools
locally. - At the village schools, similarly vocational
rehabilitation is provided to deserving
individuals by liaison with WORTH,SHARE, MVT and
DDRO training centres.
23At CHAD
- Maintaining a database and reports of the
disabled and their follow up in the community - Involved in screening children at the
immunization clinic for disabilities. - Providing occupational therapy care and advice
for patients admitted or referred during OPD
services at CHAD. - Interdisciplinary team rounds and meeting every
Friday. - Involvement in training personnel in community
based rehabilitation programmes
24The challenge...
- Disabled persons in rural areas of developing
countries have very little access to education,
health, and vocational services. - In countries that do offer these services, they
are usually carried out in large cities which are
difficult for disabled persons to access. - Lack of community awareness and cultural
attitudes also adversely affect the lives of
disabled persons, especially in more isolated
communities.
25Barriers to use of ICT
- Affordability
- Accessibility
- Functional limitation
- Lack of skills
- Lack of literacy
26- ICT provides opportunities to the
- Rich
- Educated
- Urban
- Mainstream
- Can it increase the divide between the haves
and have-nots
27The Challenge
- To use ICT creatively to level the playing field
in economic social and political terms by
impacting the lives of people and empowering them
using ICT
28- ICT can affect health conditions in developing
countries by - Directly by increased and more efficient health
care provision - Indirectly by impacting social determinants of
health
29ICT and health services
- Continuing education and lifelong learning for
doctors - Enhanced delivery mechanisms to the poor and
underserved locations for variety of services
including telemedicine - Increasing transparency and efficiency of
governance