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Interventions in Health for Tsunami Victims in India

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Title: Interventions in Health for Tsunami Victims in India


1
Interventions in Health for Tsunami Victims in
India
  • C. Kumar
  • Tsunami Response Program
  • CARE India, Chennai

2
The Tsunami Context
  • CARE one of many agencies to respond to Tsunami
    quite sooner
  • Severely hit districts covered 4 in AP, 3 in
    Tamil Nadu, and 1 in Pondicherry, and Andaman
    Nicobar Islands
  • Identified gaps in relief extended and filled in
    gaps non-food items, temporary shelter,
    drinking water, sanitation, medicines supply etc.
  • Subsequently implemented community micro projects
    to help communities recover and reestablish
    productive assets, community infrastructure and
    lost linkages to markets and services.
  • Initiated long term interventions for rebuilding
    livelihood systems about ten sub-sectors
    identified
  • Other interventions included shelter, water and
    sanitation, psychosocial care, community based
    disaster preparedness
  • Launched a large scale micro insurance program in
    tsunami hit districts in Andhra Pradesh and
    subsequently in Tamil Nadu Pondicherry in 2006
    as part of long term strategy to strengthen
    community resilience

3
Approach to program designing
  • Health interventions integral component of
    disaster response programs complements
    designing and implementation of other
    interventions such as shelter, livelihoods etc
  • Complement the initiatives by the governments and
    other aid agencies
  • Focus on the poor and most vulnerable- especially
    the women and children
  • Increase awareness, enhance access to and
    availability of resources, eventually increase
    communitys resilience for disasters
  • CAREs perspective on humanitarian response to
    link programs of relief, recovery and
    rehabilitation to measures for disaster
    preparedness and risk reduction.

4
Interventions in Health
  • Spanning all three phases of disaster response -
    relief, rehabilitation and rebuilding
  • Relief provisions of hygiene kits, medicines,
    halogen tablets, floor mats, safe drinking water,
    sanitation facilities, and psychosocial care
  • Recovery and Rehabilitation
  • Psychosocial care,
  • water and sanitation and
  • micro health insurance

5
Psychosocial care
  • Relief phase Emotional first aid to victims,
    sensitization in the government and
    non-government sectors (trained VHNs, Anganwadi
    teachers, school teachers, health functionaries,
    NGO functionaries, volunteers from the community)
  • Rehabilitation phase building capacities on
    technical content, process skills and motivation,
    integrating with primary health care centers, and
    other government departments, strengthening
    referral systems
  • Rebuilding phase building capacities at the
    community level, life skills education to
    children, integrating with disaster preparedness
  • Resulted in increased psychosocial awareness,
    volunteerism, mental health literacy, increased
    capabilities, realization on the need for
    spectrum of care and disaster preparedness

6
Water and Sanitation
  • Ensured safe drinking water and sanitation
    facilities in relief camps and temporary shelters
  • Cleaned up and desalinated wells and other
    drinking water sources like ponds
  • Improved access to safe drinking water facilities
    to about 20,000 families provision of new hand
    pumps with platform and soak pits, provision of
    filter points, reverse osmosis plants, storage
    arrangements etc
  • Upgraded sanitation technology using available
    low cost alternatives eco-san toilets
  • Construction of community sanitary complexes
  • Sensitized and built awareness in the community
    for behaviour change
  • Integrated with ICDS Program for mainstreaming
    initiatives to focus on women and children
  • Promoted school hygiene and sanitation programs
  • Strengthen the network of NGOs and CBOs

7
Micro Health Insurance
  • Protection against health risks accorded first
    priority by the communities
  • There were experiences of epidemics like
    chickengunia in the post tsunami context
  • A free micro health insurance introduced by the
    government in select villages, but was limited in
    out reach with apprehensions about continuity
  • CARE introduced micro insurance as a risk coping
    mechanism layered over livelihoods rehabilitation
    initiatives to take care of repeat disasters of
    varying scale
  • Community Based Disaster Preparedness program
    helps in risk reduction and protection, but needs
    to be complemented by appropriate risk mitigation
    mechanisms
  • Micro health insurance piloted in one district as
    a community mutual with private insurance company
    offering co-insurance support a unique model in
    the country - program extended to other districts
    now

8
Micro Health insurance Product features
  • Health Insurance for low income community from
    commercial insurance companies is rare, therefore
    introduced
  • As community mutual to keep premiums low, take
    advantage of existing solidarity, to reduce
    administrative expenses and keep the moral hazard
    at bay
  • Risks shared with insurance company through
    co-insurance option (3664)
  • Age cover 3 months to 70 years
  • Cover for the entire family and frequently
    occurring illnesses
  • Cover for epidemics
  • Cover for surgical care, medical care and day
    care

9
Overall Learning
  • Need to design interventions so as to complement
    the government support initiatives
  • Map communities needs and priorities and work in
    tandem with other aid and development agencies
  • Effective coordination mechanisms required at all
    levels
  • Never compromise on standards and programming
    principles promote empowerment, work with
    partners, ensure accountability and promote
    responsibility, address discrimination, promote
    non-violent resolution of conflicts
  • Even in a disaster context, program interventions
    to in-build mechanisms for sustainability the
    investments made in the communities, public and
    private systems are to result in increasing
    impact and synergies
  • Institutionalize systems and processes and build
    local capacities for management and governance
  • Turn disasters into opportunities for the
    communities

10
  • Thank You
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