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    No Dignity, No Rights but Filth Forever: Manual Scavengers in Photographs
    (2019) Naomi Barton; Photographer-Sudhakar Olwe
    This Photo essay documents the state of manual scavengers at 16 locations across the states of Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh with a specific focus on women. It shows the deplorable condition of women and families trapped in the stranglehold and vicious cycle of caste based occupation of manual scavenging. Besides, it depicts systemic disempowerment and how we have become insensate to modern day slavery of manual scavenging.
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    Tuberculosis Story
    (2021) Mohit Gandhi
    This is a story of Jeetan and Ram from Bihar, Vaishali district who migrate to Mumbai in search of work and start working at a construction site there in the stone crusher section. It highlights social and occupational risk factors of Tuberculosis and HIV and their interaction with the public health care delivery system. The case story highlights the journey of Jeetan and Ram from the development and manifestation of symptoms of TB to challenges in seeking treatment. The case study is divided into 9 sections, each section highlights some pertinent issues along with pointers for duscussion and some reflections.
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    Project Swaasthya: Primary Care for Migrant Workers using Telemedicine
    (2021-22) Daily Wage Worker Platform (DWWP)
    This case study documents how DWWP in collaboration with Smile foundation developed and implemented the idea of three-month emergency health package to provide basic essential health services to migrant workers at their doorsteps affected by pandemic, lockdown and monsoon. The project was implemented through telemedicine to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Patients who visited the mobile vans were screened by a nurse who connected them to doctors through phone and shared the prescription through WhatsApp. The services include screening, diagnosis, treatment, counselling and referrals. DWWP designed a health survey to collect primary data about migrants vis. a. vis. demographics, access to sanitary products, health profile and access to health care in 10 identified slums using a convenience sampling method. These findings were used to understand the disease profile of the residents and subsquently provide them with nescessary health care services. Community mobilizers were used to spread awareness about the mobile van OPD clinics. Impact of the project includes 60 OPDs with 3,847 beneficiaries with majority of them being women and children, 3000 hygeine kits were distributed in the community, 47 cases were referred to higher centres and 34 community meetings were conducted for generating awareness regarding COVID-19 and NCDs. Some of the learnings include importance of partnership where DWWP and Smile Foundation leveraged each other's strengths to reach the poor, use of telemedicine helped beat the lockdown and implementation of prevention and awareness program, behaviour change as a result of community outreach and use of generic medicines. This model can be used to provide low cost primary care to vulnerable, marginalized and unreached population where health care is sparse.
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    Women in the Lead- Monitoring Health Services in Bangladesh
    (2103) Samina Afrin; Sarita Barpanda; Abhijit Das
    A Series of case-studies that shows community organized efforts to negotiate better health care services from the State and women's fight for their reproductive rights and address gender based violence. Besides, it highlights the efforts of WHRAP initiative of Naripokkho to strengthen health systems accountability through its three pronged strategy viz. community monitoring of health clinics, training functionaries of its partnership organization and working in collaboration with member of parliament, local elected representative and members of hospital management to create a participatory review and planning mechanism.
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    In the Nilgiris, an Inheritance of Malnutrition
    (2020) Priti David
    The case study is a story of two women Kanaka and Suma from the tribal community in Gudalur that shows rising alcoholism, vicious cycle of severe malnutrition among women and children and its intergenerational transmission among the community members. The case study, also demonstrates how quantitative data or statistics in silos could be misleading and has the potential to mask the stark inequalities that might exist while simultaneously there could be an overall improvement in the health indicators of a community.
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    Counselling and Care on Call: The Story of the TB Careline
    (2020-21) Karnataka Health Promotion Trust (KHPT)
    This case study documents the journey of a free-of-cost phone-based TB Careline Program based in a modest office of single room in Dharward that counsels TB patients and provides information about the disease to those opting for the service. Besides, it links the patients back to treatment if they discontinue and provide feedback to the providers about their patient status. First part of the case study discusses the background and evolution of the TB careline program earlier known as' Mitra' that was born out of an intervention conducted under Strengthening Health Outcomes Through the Private Sector (SHOPS) in 2014. It also shows how the intervention has managed to sustain over a period of time and then goes on to discuss the impact it has created in terms of providing care to the TB patients. The process of counselling and care begins when a patient with a Careline card is instructed to give a missed call on +91 7349778223. A care line counsellor returns the call. First call is the introductory call, subsquently the first session begins. The TB careline has registered 15,989 patients between 2014 to 2020. During this period 7,241 patients have completed treatment and 2,552 patients are under active care. The service is flexible and adaptable to the needs of the patient and requirements of the health systems. One of the important learnings from the case study is use of technology to offer a personalized approach to prevention, care and support without removing the human connect and making it acceptable to the patient and caregiver. This type of interventions are especially important when treatment period is long with mandatory dosage and road to recovery is long and is made more difficult by socio-economic factors like poverty, malnutrition and stigmatization.
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    The Long Road to the Sugarcane Fields
    (2017) M.N. Parth
    The case study shows how agrarian crisis combined with lack of subsistence due to unavailability of work in villages of Beed District has induced mass migration of workers to seek work as an agricultural labourer in the Sugarcane fields. Besides, it highlights social disruptions and economic distress it has induced in workers lives and its consequences for their health.
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    Obesity Prevention in Children: Media Campaigns, Stigma and Ethics. (From the Book-Public Health Ethics: Cases Spanning the Globe)
    (2016) Erika Blacksher; D.H. Barret et al. (Edited)
    This case study raises issues of vulnerability, stigma, State coercion and intrusion in personal choices in designing media campain and strategies for prevention of obesity among children. It highlights ethical issues and challenges of health communication.
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    Society for Nutrition, Education and Health Action (SNEHA): An Ethos of Care
    (2023) Menaka Rao; Shantanu Menon; Kushagra Merchant; Aruna Pandey
    This case study documents the journey of SNEHA- a public health organization that works in dense poor and low income urban settlements. It emphasizes on prevention and adopting community based approaches to reduce excessive reliance on institution-led public health delivery. It also documents organizational culture of appreciative inquiry, and use of technology and community based models that has allowed SNEHA to flourish in a rapidly urbanizing agglomeration.
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    The Banyan Newsletter
    (Deccember-2022) The Banyan
    This news letter presents the stories of individuals (Komal, Lakshmi, Kanagi, Usha and Manohar) who were provided care through 'Home Again' program and 'Emergency Care and Recovery Center (ECRC)' initiative of Banyan. It highlights their struggle with homelessness, poverty, abuse, and grief leading to mental health issues and how they were reached out and provided care through these programs. Home again program provides housing with bespoke support leading to substantive community integartion for people with psychosocial disabilities. ECRCs offers multidisciplinary person-centred hospital-based care for homeless people with mental health issues.