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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, September 30, 2001 |
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Concern over high infant mortality rate
By Our Special Correspondent
HYDERABAD, SEPT. 29. Maternal and infant mortality is high in
Andhra Pradesh though it has achieved spectacular results in
propagating the small family norm, according to the Commissioner
of Family Welfare, Mrs. Neelam Sawhney.
About a lakh of children die out of 18 lakh children born every
year and even the morbidity among the infants was not under
control, she said in her address to Polio Plus Workshop organised
by the Rotary Club of Hyderabad on Saturday.
She called for active participation by Rotary and other voluntary
organisations in the mass immunisation programme of the
Government. Last year about 105 lakh children in the age group of
0-5 years were immunised and about five personnel were involved
in this programme, she explained.
The State Government was aiming at polio eradication through
different strategies like universal immunisation programme which
was launched in 1985, nation-wide mass immunisation programme,
surveillance programme and the pulse polio immunisation programme
launched in 1995, she explained.
Mrs. Sawhney said the pulse polio activity was aimed at
eradicating the virus completely. As many as 1,126 cases were
reported in 1999 all over India and the figure dropped to 269 in
2000. But no case was reported in Andhra Pradesh last year and
till now this year. But in the surveillance work, one case was
reported in the bordering areas of Karnataka.
Kerala reported one case last year after ``nil'' report in the
previous three years. The States were told that there should be
no dilution in the programme at the field level, she said.
The Family Welfare Commissioner said about 53,000 booths would be
set up for the intensive immunisation programme this year and
asked the Rotary Club to handle at least 300 to 400 booths.
Dr. Jayashree Desai, Director, District Polio Plus Committee, Mr.
J.A.S. Giri, Chairman, District Polio Plus Workshop, Mr. V. Shiv
Swamy, president of the club, and others spoke.
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