New Delhi, July 23 (IANS/IndiaSpend) During Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s first year in office, the health ministry has relaunched existing programmes and claimed credit for programmes not launched by the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government.
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Factchecker took a look at the claims and realities:
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1. Mission Indradhanush, a new immunisation programme: Only the name is new
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Claim: A new programme named Mission Indradhanush will target areas of low immunisation.
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Reality: Mission Indradhanush is the new name for Special Immunisation Weeks (SIWs), which have been conducted every year in areas of low immunisation under the Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP).
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Special vaccination campaigns were planned for seven to 10 days in 201 high-focus districts during March-June 2015 under Mission Indradhanush. But this has routinely been done in preceding years. For example, in 2013-14, four rounds (April, June, July and August) of SIWs were conducted in 31 states and union territories. More than 9.8 million doses of various antigens were administered to children.
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Similarly, during 2012-13, SIWs were carried out in low-coverage areas and more than 17.3 million doses of various antigens were administered.
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2. Mission Indradhanush will be world’s largest immunisation drive: It already is
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Claim: Mission Indradhanush, “the largest-ever immunisation drive”, will immunise 8.9 million children.
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Reality: UIP is one of the largest programs in the world, according to immunisation summary report jointly published by United Nations Children’s Fund and World Health Organisation.
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More than 20 million pregnant women and children were immunised during 2011-12, according to data released by the health ministry.
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3. India Newborn Action Plan (INAP): One of many existing plans
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Claim:Â INAP aims to end all preventable new-born deaths and still births by 2030.
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Reality:Â INAP is the latest entrant to a long list of existing interventions under the National Health Mission (NHM) to reduce neo-natal and maternal mortality.
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A few of these interventions and programmes are:
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* Round-the-clock maternal care services at community health centres and primary health centres promotion of institutional delivery through Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY) and Janani Shishu Suraksha Karyakram (JSSK) new-born care corners at all health facilities
* Special new born care units (SNCUs) and new born stabilisation units
* Home-based new born care through Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs)
* Prevention and treatment of anaemia with iron and folic acid tablets during pregnancy and lactation prevention of anaemia due to malaria, tackled by long-lasting insecticide nets and insecticide-treated bed nets
* Name-based tracking of pregnant women to ensure ante-natal, intra-natal and post-natal care integrated management of neo-natal and childhood illnesses
* Universal immunisation programme for about 135 million children against seven vaccine-preventable diseases through nine million immunisation sessions each year
* Capacity building of healthcare providers through training of nurses under NHM
Engagement of more than 0.89 million ASHAs village health and nutrition days
* Reproductive maternal new-born child-health+adolescent interventions in 184 high priority districts
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The two targets proposed in INAP are (a) reducing preventable new-born deaths and (b) reducing preventable still-births to single digits, fewer than 10 per 1,000 live births by 2030 (as against 22 per 1,000 live births today).
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4. India’s first mental-health policy launched: Work began in 2011
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Claim:Â Launched the country’s first-ever mental health policy.
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Reality: The work of framing a national mental-health policy began in April 2011, following a resolution on mental disorders adopted at the World health Assembly. The government constituted a policy group to frame a mental-health policy, launched in October 2014.
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(In arrangement with IndiaSpend.org, a data-driven, non-profit, public interest journalism platform. Factchecker is a part of IndiaSpend. Manoj K can be contacted at webmaster@indiaspend.org)Â