India crucial to global internet connectivity

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has announced a partnership with Reliance Communications to launch an Indian version of the free mobile data service Internet.org.

The app will offer Indian users free access to basic internet services for education, news, travel, health, jobs, and communication across 38 websites.

 As of December last year, the majority of the population (944 million) owned a mobile phone, yet the country had just over 243 million internet users, of which only 86 million had broadband access.

Facebook is initially launching Internet.org in six Indian states, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Kerala and Telanagan, before fully rolling the project out nationally.

Reliance Communications CEO Gurdeep Singh suggested that around 60 million users would enjoy internet access for the first time via the app.

Reliance Communications customers in India can access the free services through the Internet.org Android app available at http://www.internet.org. On other mobile devices, the service can be accessed directly through the browser.

http://thestack.com/india-crucial-global-internet-connectivity-zuckerberg-110215

Better diet and nutrition critical in maintaining mental health

A new international study led by the University of Melbourne and Deakin University has stated that as with a range of medical conditions, psychiatry and public health should now recognise and embrace diet and nutrition as key determinants of mental health.

Lead author, Dr Jerome Sarris said that while the determinants of mental health were complex, the emerging and compelling evidence for nutrition as a key factor in the high prevalence and incidence of mental disorders suggested that nutrition was as important to psychiatry as it is to cardiology, endocrinology and gastroenterology.

In the last few years, significant links have been established between nutritional quality and mental health. Scientifically rigorous studies have made important contributions to our understanding of the role of nutrition in mental health, he added.

Findings of the review revealed that in addition to dietary improvement, evidence now supports the contention that nutrient-based prescription has the potential to assist in the management of mental disorders at the individual and population level.

Studies show that many of these nutrients have a clear link to brain health, including omega-3s, B vitamins (particularly folate and B12), choline, iron, zinc, magnesium, S-adenosyl methionine (SAMe), vitamin D, and amino acids.

The study is published in The Lancet Psychiatry

http://zeenews.india.com/news/health/healthy-eating/better-diet-and-nutrition-critical-in-maintaining-mental-health_1538836.html

Insight – Deserted New Delhi hospitals sour India’s healthcare dream

Two state-of-the-art public hospitals in New Delhi are barely operational years after they officially opened – not for lack of funding but because officials did not spend the millions of dollars allocated to treat heart and kidney patients.

The empty hospitals in the heart of the Indian capital are emblematic of the paralysis gripping a public health system that is responsible for some of the world’s worst health indicators. Many of the country’s 1.2 billion people have a choice between expensive private care, or no care at all.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi faces many challenges to his stated goal of providing universal public health coverage, but one of the most daunting is ending the logjams that mean officials consistently fail to use their budgets.

At the 300-bed Janakpuri Super Speciality Hospital, gleaming marble-floored corridors disappear into dark wings, thick chains locking the doors to most of the five-storey building. Wards lie empty, without beds. It officially opened in 2008.

In another part of the city of 16 million people, the Rajiv Gandhi Super Speciality Hospital sits in a landscaped 13-acre complex. It started outpatient services in 2003 but more than a decade later only six beds – of the 650 the hospital was built for – receive overnight patients.

The hospitals were allocated $48 million in the current financial year but still lack basic equipment and, crucially, doctors. They will only spend a fraction of the amount by year-end: under 20 percent in the case of Janakpuri hospital.

A Reuters investigation found no evidence that corruption was responsible for the situation. Instead, officials and health experts blamed a tortuous procurement process, political wrangling and bureaucratic incompetence.

Janakpuri hospital Director M.M. Mehndiratta said he waited 15 months for approval to hire more doctors, with the request travelling to Delhi’s top health officials before getting stuck for months in the administrative and finance departments.

India’s health system will need to add 3.6 million hospital beds, 3 million doctors and 6 million nurses over the next 20 years to meet the needs of the growing population, consultants PwC India estimate.

“We buy an X-ray machine, but there is no X-ray operator,” Health Minister J.P. Nadda said while discussing general health funding with reporters last month. “Money is not the major factor, it is (the lack of) optimal utilisation.”

Data compiled by Reuters in collaboration with the Public Health Foundation of India shows the under-utilisation is a national problem. Even though India revised down its federal health budget mid-year in all but one year since 2005, the country only once managed to spend all the funds.

A senior health official in New Delhi blamed delays such as those plaguing Rajiv Gandhi and Janakpuri hospitals on the incompetence of government employees and a “lethargic and slow” process of selecting vendors. Fearing corruption charges, officials work in an environment of “procurement phobia”.

“We need clearances from about 10 agencies before laying even a brick,” said the official, who asked not to be named.

Since the Delhi government began building the Rajiv Gandhi and Janakpuri hospitals in 1998, dozens of private hospitals have sprung up to meet the city’s growing medical needs.

Industry body ASSOCHAM estimated in 2013 that India’s private hospital sector would grow at 20 percent annually and become a $125 billion market by 2017.

The private sector now accounts for 80 percent of India’s healthcare delivery market.

Apollo Hospitals Enterprise Ltd., India’s largest listed hospital chain by revenue, classifies inadequate public spending as one of its growth drivers.

http://in.reuters.com/article/2015/02/12/india-healthcare-hospitals-idINKBN0LF2G220150212

Gujarat to track child education record using Unique Identification code

Dropout of children from schools, their absenteeism, performance of government schools and its teachers have had a sledgehammer impact on primary education in various states, including Gujarat that is not known to have an impressive track record. 

But, things seem to be changing in Gujarat. 

Conceived in December 2012, the state government has from the June 2014 academic year put into practice a child education tracking system by assigning a digitised Unique Identification code number to all the whopping 87 lakh students between standard 1 and standard 8. 

According to Mukesh Kumar, state project coordinator of the Centre’s Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (SSA), every child will have an 18-digit UID number to track his or her academic career. 

“It will not only track the reasons for his dropping out from school, his absenteeism and his performance but this will also be linked to the consequent training programmes for teachers,” Mukesh Kumar told Mail Today. 

He explained that under this system, annual child-wise records would be maintained with the student’s name, birth date, details of parents, address and incentives or benefits received, if at all, from the government. It has been called Aadhaar-enabled District Information System for Education (DISE). 

Officials informed that the usual DISE captures only the figures of enrolment, but this has been termed Aadhar-enabled system since the latter contains a comprehensive data of every resident’s demographic and biometric information, “which they can use to identify themselves anywhere in India, and to access a host of benefits and services”. 

The same concept has been adopted to build a database of students and to provide unique identification number to all the students in the schools. 

Among the key aims of the project is to deal with problems like fake enrolment, fudged dropout and retention numbers as well as to ensure universalisation of elementary education, Mukesh Kumar said. 

This web-enabled system will not only help become a complete academic track record of every student and his or her socio-economic situation reflected through dropouts and absenteeism but, “very importantly, also create a database and parameters of the performance of every school.” 

According to Mukesh Kumar, the database would bring out the commonalities in academic failures in the schools and this would provide the education department a hands-on material for training of teachers to improve their performance. 

“And thus contribute to the overall improvement of the basic education performance of the state,” he added. 

The entire project was specially designed and developed by the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan and the Monitoring Information System of Gujarat. 

The first set of data for 87 lakh students for the academic year 2013-2014 was collected by a Cluster Resource Centre. 

And this time the data is being collected right from the block level. 

According to an internal Education Department note, “a central interface team also called as District Team & Block Team will monitor the end users CRC (Cluster Resource Co-coordinators) to track the entire group of schools allocated to each one of them.” 

The tracking will include the facility and enrolment, distribution of helpdesk operations forms across all the schools.