
source….www.periva.proboards.com
Natarajan
No matter their cultural background, no matter their economic situation, kids will always find imaginative ways to have fun. Their wild imaginations and magical childhood moments, when captured on camera by talented photographers, can make for truly wonderful photos. These 33 images we collected will prove that childhood can be wonderful no matter where you go.
Many in the Western world fear that technology is making today’s children lose touch with nature and with their own creativity, and while there are arguments to be made for the intellectual stimulation that apps and programs for children can bring, there’s also something to be said for simply playing with a stick in the mud or chasing dandelion seeds though an open meadow.
For better or worse, the children in these photos seem entirely content making their own fun. For us adults, it’s important not to let our world-weary and jaded experience stifle our childish hopefulness and imagination!

Image credits: Ipoenk Graphic

Image credits: Agoes Antara

Image credits: I Gede Lila Kantiana

Image credits: Gede Lila Kantiana

Image credits: Светлана Квашинa

Image credits: Elena Shumilova
Burkina Faso

Image credits: Òscar Tardío

Image credits: Chan Kwok Hung

Image credits: Damon Lynch

Image credits: Sandee Pachetan

Image Credits: Sudharsan Ravikumar

Image credits: Mukund Images

Image Credits: HT KëñShi

Image credits: Terry White

mage credits: Elika Hunt

Image credits: Sarawut Intarob

Image credits: Sarawut Intarob

Image credits: Sarawut Intarob

Image credits: Muhammed Muheisen

Source: tinosoriano.com

Image credits: Enrique Castro-Mendivil

Image credits: Csilla Zelko

Image credits: Michael Potyomin

Image credits: Dima Vazinovich

Image credits: Jake Olson

Image credits: Rio Rinaldi Rachmatullah

Image credits: James Khoo

Image credits: Hendrik Priyanto

Image Credits: Mio Cade

Image credits: John Van Den Hende

Image credits: Elena Simona Craciun

Image credits: Elena Shumilova
Source…..www.boredpanda.com
natarajan
An Auxiliary Nurse Midwife (ANM) is often the first point of contact between a health centre and a mother or expectant mother in India. She takes care of activities as basic as registration of pregnant women to more advanced interventions like routine immunization, identifying medical complications and providing referrals. An ANM has a lot of responsibilities and this simple, mobile-based intervention, Suyojana, enables her to effectively carry out her duties.
Rohini, from Chamrajnagar, Karnataka, is an Auxiliary Nurse Midwife (ANM), working in rural areas of the state. Despite the fact that she is proactive and interested in her work, Rohini often finds herself struggling to remain on top of all the information required to serve her patients effectively. From tracking crucial health parameters to scheduling important visits for critical cases, Rohini finds herself swamped with details that she is unable to handle in an organized manner.
Recently, however, Rohini began using Suyojana, a mobile-based application that improves the decision-making processes in maternal and child care activities undertaken by ANMs.
“The Suyojana application guides me from one step to another, within examinations and investigations, and does not let me skip a single step. This has made my work way more organized and systematic. The application has also made it very easy to identify high-risk cases and refer the patients on time to better facilities. The tool helps me take the right decisions at the right time,” says Rohini.

ANMs can keep track of their patients in a better way and also take necessary actions on time. –
Rohini is just one among several ANMs who have benefitted from the simple technology, Suyojana, launched by Swasti, a health resource centre established to provide health services to socially backward communities, in collaboration with D-Tree International and Karuna Trust.
“Swasti has been working in this field for 11 years now and work on improving different aspects of public health. Since ANMs do such important work at the grassroots level, we thought it was necessary to make decision-making easier for them through this mobile intervention,” says Shama Karkal, Director, Swasti.

The app does not let an ANM update her patients’ profile until all the fields in the app are filled. –
As par-medical professionals who are closest to the rural communities, ANMs play a crucial role. They are required to use their knowledge in order to take requisite actions on time.
Though ANMs undergo training, many times they are unaware of the basic practices they should follow. Shama recalls that ANMs met during the pilot did not carry blood pressure or weighing machines during home visits. “Everyone assumes that they know what they are doing. Even ANMs are not aware of what they could do better and there is no system to monitor the quality of the care they provide.
Without the application, ANMs can skip many of the examinations and other critical components of an ante-natal or post-natal visit.
This results in incomplete and in-accurate health monitoring of pregnant women and children.
This is where Suyojana plays a crucial role. This mobile-based clinical-decision support system (DSS) provides ANMs with consistent guidance with antenatal care (ANC), postnatal care (PNC), and neonatal care.
The mobile app takes ANMs through all the procedures and guidelines to identify the person’s conditions and provides options for decision making. The app uses the national guidelines maternal and neonatal care to guide the ANM. The app also allowsANMs to track patients they have visited, their expected clinic visit dates, their medication, etc. This also helps ANMs to identify those women who are due for their next appointment, both in-clinic visits and home visits.
“The app has various forms which ANMs complete during different visits. The forms in the application include registration, antenatal history (for ANC clients), pregnancy outcome (for PNC clients), danger signs, physical examination, investigation tests, intervention, and counselling. Basic care and monitoring of the child is also included — from foetal heart rate to neonatal danger signs, pre-referral treatments and home-based new-born care counselling. Required fields in the app must be completed in order to complete the visit and record it. This way, every aspect of the care provided is tracked,” says Shama.
With the app the ANMs do not need to maintain multiple registers. The app generates the standard reports which can be further customized.
Another interesting aspect of the app is that it also runs offline and synchronizes with the server using general packet radio service (GPRS) for back up, reporting and analysis.
The impact

With the app the ANMs do not need to maintain multiple registers.
Thanks to the easily available data, a supervisor can track the details from the server and can identify maternal health trends in a particular area. This way ANMs can also take expert advice from remote locations and can decide the next step they need to take on time.
“This application will help us in quickly referring a complicated case to higher public health facilities and will replace the cumbersome procedure of checking registers and day books. All we would be required to do is click on the app to get all the details. This would be a great relief for us and reduce our workload,” says Saraswathi, yet another ANM from Karnataka.
The interesting initiative, which was launched as a pilot project in March 2014 in Chamarajanagar district, involved 31 ANMs in four districts of Karnataka, including Chamarajanagar, Ramanagara, Bijapur, and Chikkaballapur.
To make the app more user-friendly, all the information is available in Kannada. The ANMs are first given formal training before they actually start using this app. Once the training is complete, ANMs using this app and sync the data collected by them on a regular basis. There is also a full-time supervisor who assists the ANMs in case of difficulties.
“We launched it on mobile phones since they are easier to use and are more handy. Currently, we install the app on the mobile phones of ANMs and it is not available for the general public to use,” says Shama.
Though the simple mobile app looks like a feasible solution to address difficulties of ANMs and the quality of care provided by them, the team is still struggling to have it accepted with the government.
The pilot was funded by D-Tree International, has a small team of four members, who are looking forward to expanding the initiative to cover many more districts and ANMs.
To know more about the initiative, contact Angela at – angela@swasti.org or check out their website.
Source…..Shreya Pareek….www.the betterindia.com
Natarajan
Ever since the advent of the internet and e-books, printed books are of no value anywhere now.” So thought this US citizen who had books to give away. An ACP in Tirupur, India, disagreed. The books crossed the ocean and found a home in his police station.
Sometime in 2014, an India-born philanthropist from the US visited India, visiting Coimbatore and Tirupur in Tamil Nadu. In a light conversation with the Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP), Tirupur, he mentioned that he wished to donate books for a children’s library in the area. Kids in the United States of America do not read books anymore, he said. They have access to reading material through e-books, which are easily available to them on any electronic device.
“At one time, if a school child wanted to find out information about something for a project, a trip to the central library in town was an essential requirement. Notes were made, rough pictures were drawn and, once home, all this information was put out on charts or on umpteen sheets of paper, which were neatly spiral bound before being submitted in school,” says Mr. Chakravarty, the father of a college-going girl from Coimbartore, who is also a friend of the ACP of Tirupur.
Today, even in developing countries, children have access to all kinds of information on electrical devices. Just having a smart phone is enough to log onto Google from anywhere — and all the data one would want is available online.
However, in the United States and other western countries, in particular, many children have stopped borrowing books from school libraries. There are some people who feel these books may be of use to children in small towns like Tirupur in Tamil Nadu.

“As soon as this particular philanthropist went back to the US after his Indian sojourn, he transported 5,000 books to Tirupur. Such beautiful books, such a lovely world of information,” says the ACP, who does not wish to be named. “All the policemen in the North Police Station, Tirupur, were spellbound seeing so many books.”
The policemen immediately got down to sorting out the books in various categories. They numbered every one of the books and almost 2,000 of them were donated to the Rotary Club right away.
Picture books were meant for very small children, larger books for older children, children’s novels, novels for adults, reference books on various subjects, some textbooks and even encyclopedias — there were all kinds of books.
These books seemed to have been picked up from the libraries of many American schools and sent to India with the hope that children here would find better use for them. –

Once the books were sorted and numbered, the ACP began looking for a place to set up a library. Unable to find a suitable location, he rearranged the furniture in the large hall in his police station and put shelves filled with books right in the middle of the room.
“Having set up the place, we contacted the principals of the local schools and told them about the library that we have here,” says the ACP. “School children have to bring with them a letter of permission from the principal of the school and we then allow them to borrow books. A register is maintained with information about the child and the books that he/she has borrowed. The borrower is allowed to keep the book for a period of fifteen days,” he adds.
“As soon as the police station opens in the morning, the library too is declared open, and it remains so until the police station closes for the day. Anyone can come and visit the library at any time on a working day,” says one of the constables at the police station.

“Most of the constables have very limited knowledge of the English language. They may be able to understand a little, and may even be able to string a few words together to speak a sentence, but their reading and writing skills in English are virtually nil,” continues the constable.
However, flipping through books in any language, especially if they have pictures, is a real pleasure, and most people spend their spare time doing just that, he adds.
“It has been barely three months since the children have been coming here from the school nearby to borrow books,” says the ACP, “and it will take at least a year before we can evaluate how useful it is to have books donated from across the world for the benefit of our children.”
This library, at the Tirupur police station, is an experiment of sorts. If he finds that it is a success, with children gaining from the experience, the ACP proposes connecting with the philanthropist in the US again and getting him to donate some more books to establish other libraries in the state.
Natarajan