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बदलाव की बयार“कोरगो”

लोहरदगा जिले के किसको प्रखण्ड में दुर्गम पहाड़ी क्षेत्र में स्थित गोरेगांव जिसकी आबादी लगभाग 600 है।

सरीना और सबुनी की कहानी

झारखण्ड राज्य के पश्चिमी सिंहभूम जिला बसाहातु सी.एच.सी से 3 किलोमीटर दूरी में कुस्तुइया गांव बसा है उसी गांव में…

एक कदम बदलाव की ओर

जिस समुदाय के बीच हम काम करते हैं वहां सहिया दीदी के सहयोग तथा समुदाय के लोगों के सहयोग से…

Published in Print & Electronics Media

Nutrition Warriors | In Naxalite Land, A Doctor Couple’s Crusade To Save Tribal Communities In Jharkhand, Odisha

Outlook, Saturday, Oct 28, 2023

Prasanta Tripathy and Nirmala Nair left global careers to settle in Chakradharpur. They set up Ekjut in 2002 to provide health and nutrition training on community participation

Garlanding India- Ride for a cause

www.garlandingindia.com

Ekjut (meaning ‘coming together’) is an NGO which was founded by Dr. Prasanta Tripathy and Dr. Nirmala Nair in 2002 in Jharkhand and, has now expanded to other Indian states such as Bihar, West Bengal, Rajasthan, and Madhya Pradesh.

How Crèches Impact the Lives of Tribals in Jharkhand

News18, FEBRUARY 17, 2023

“Ab to ghar par bhi saboon maangti hai hath dhone ke liye” (Now she asks for soap even at home to wash her hands) – Laxmi.

Doctor Couple Innovate Steps to Reduce Infant Mortality, Model Now Replicated in 50,000 Villages

The Better India, September 6, 2021

Dr Prasanta Tripathy and Dr Nirmala Nair quit their jobs and launched Ekjut, an NGO that works to reduce infant and maternal mortality rates in Jharkhand and save thousands of lives among tribal communities

These Mamata Gharas Prevent Child Malnutrition

Outlook POSHAN, July 14, 2020

Over 1,800 tribal children in high-malnutrition pockets of Keonjhar district find succor in creches which feed and protect them while their parents work.

Mental health patients see better days in Jharkhand

Village Square, October 21, 2019

Misconceptions about mental health lead to mistreatment of afflicted tribal people in Jharkhand. Awareness initiatives, community support and treatment are now improving their lives

Better awareness improves maternal and child health

Village Square- September 13, 2019

Awareness meetings that equip women with knowledge on health and nutrition during pregnancy and after childbirth is helping to tackle malnutrition in rural Singhbhum in Jharkhand.

Keeping it simple, keeps babies alive

THE HINDU, January 30, 2016

A simple step of holding meetings with women on health issues brought down neonatal death rates in five remote districts of Jharkhand and Odisha – a success story recorded in 2011 and 2012 that will feature in the February edition of The Lancet Global Health.

Center adopts sate model to bring down crib deaths

THE TIMES OF INDIA, January 26, 2016

Ranchi: A social intervention program aimed at bringing down the neonatal mortality rate (NNMR) in Jharkhand is set to be scaled up in 10 states across the country by the year end.

NGO in state among 6 WHO awardees

THE TIMES OF INDIA, April 4, 2015

BHUBANESWAR: Ekjut, a community-based NGO working in Odisha besides Jharkhand, is among six organizations/individuals to be awarded by WHO India as public health champions, on April 1

It’s Not a Drug, It’s Not a Device – It’s Women Working Together

New Security Beat, May 29, 2013

“Cooperative nurturing is the natural state of humans,” said Anthony Costello, director of the University College London’s Institute for Global Health…

Ekjut effort cuts infant & maternal deaths

The Times of India, March 26, 2013

Targeted intervention, through participatory approach, by a non- governmental organization focusing on infant and maternal mortality, has helped in reducing mortality rate in Jharkhand and Odisha by up to 70%

Women’s Groups Saving and Changing Lives

The Huffington Post, United Kingdom, 21 May, 12

The women come one by one. Some bring blankets and some little brown sacks to sit on. They spread the blankets and the sacks neatly in front of the house.

Global recognition for child healthcare

THE TIMES OF INDIA, March 31, 2011

The trial of Ekjut, an organization working on reproductive and child healthcare, has earned global recognition for its work in underdeveloped areas of Jharkhand and Orissa

Ekjut achieves dramatic success in cutting child deaths in India

Guardian Development Network, Sept 24, 2010

The outlook for children is improving in Jharkhand and Orissa, where Ekjut has overseen a 45% reduction in child mortalities.

Lessons from the Ekjut way

THE HINDU, September 15, 2010

From Jharkhand, tales of change that spell new promise for women and children

Better healthcare, on our watch

INDIA TOGETHER, JUNE 7, 2010

A pilot project in community-based monitoring under the National Rural Health Mission in three districts of Jharkhand provides encouraging results.

BBC Health Check – Indian Infants

BBC, Friday, 4 June 2010

In rural India a trial has been using women’s groups to spread the word about safe childbirth and how to care for newborns

Women’s support groups improve neonatal survival rates

Wellcome, 8 March 2010

Women’s community groups have had a dramatic effect on reducing neonatal mortality rates in some of the poorest areas of India, according to a study published today in the ‘Lancet’.

Orissa, Jharkhand cut neonatal mortality

The Times Of India, Mar 9, 2010

It’s a success story that has dramatically curbed one of India’s worst healthcare challenges — abysmally low neonatal survival rate.

Women’s group save babies

NDTV, Mar 23, 2010

In underserved areas of Jharkhand and Orissa where neonatal mortality is extremely high, a group of women got together to help save lives of both the newborns and their mothers. And they do this through a participatory learning and action cycle.

Neonatal mortality rates on decline

Deccan Herald, 08 March 2010

These community groups provide a cost-effective intervention along with benefits such as reducing significantly maternal depression and improving decision-making amongst poor women.

Ekjut achieves dramatic success in cutting child deaths in India

The Guardian- Fri 24 Sep 2010

“It’s no age to die,” says the doctor who helped to save thousands of mothers and babies in the states of Jharkhand and Orissa. The NGO of which he is co-founder says its approach – which puts women centre stage – works even in the poorest areas.