Jaimie Shaff

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Jis Jose and Jaimie Shaff

In April 2010, RMF and JJHSS joined with UNFPA to develop interventions targeting Female Sex Workers (FSWs), one of the High Risk Groups for HIV/AIDS. Currently, we have programs in two districts of Madhya Pradesh, Jhabua and Nimach. Jis Jose is the Documentation Officer for the program, and recently visited the Nimach branch of the program. He returned with some fascinating stories, and agreed to share a couple of them in this blog.

Meenu

Before I tell you about this girl you must know about the Bhanֽchara caste that exists in the District of Nimach in the state of Madhya Pradesh, India. Bhanֽchara is a lower class caste of which girls traditionally enter into prostitution to support their family. Earlier, most of the girls from this caste entered prostitution as a custom, but today married women are not required to enter into prostitution. For these women, prostitution is more of a custom than economic necessity. While Nimach prostitutes have, in general, strong community ties and are not easily exploited, the inner stories vary as the general public does not readily help them in times of need.

Meenu

Meenu (Name Changed) is a student of an English Medium School and is very good at her studies. Her mother was a victim of partner or client violence that Female Sex Workers (FSWs) suffer from.  Meenu’s mother, Meera (name changed), was one of the most beautiful FSWs of the area. She had a good number of clients. She used to earn well. Meera fell in love with one bus conductor and accepted him at her home. They had a child together, Meenu, and seemed to have a relatively healthy relationship, away from public eye.

One morning Meera was found missing—by 10am, the village was shocked to find her body without life covered with blood in the cornfield.  The villagers knew that she had a client the previous evening and that her lover was missing, but police inquiries yielded no information. Meenu became alone in this big world.

Sheeba

Sheeba is a 45-year-old woman whose legs were attacked by Polio, leaving her unable to walk. She is an FSW from the Bhanchara cast, and has two daughters. She too has a love story. Sheeba loved a tailor who was very sympathetic to her. She thought her lover would support her children, so that they would never need to enter the flesh trade to live. One day he went missing, leaving the children without a father. The only means of economic support became the mother’s job as a sex worker.  Today, Sheeba is determined that her daughters will never have to become FSWs to support themselves. She openly informs all of her clients of this need to support her children, and has taken great lengths to educate her daughters.

FWS accepting condoms from a Peer Educator at the Drop-in Center

Today, Meenu is supported by the Bhanchara community she and her mother are from.  The women in the community have taken her in and help her to access the education necessary to depart from traditions of sex work.  By working directly with communities, RMF learns a great deal about the traditions that exist in the world, and is better able to provide necessary services. Stories such as Meenu’s are common, as FSWs around the world live in fear of persecution and violence. RMF works to empower the women partaking in our programs by providing them with access to knowledge, medical care, and support.  The valuable information and stories our incredible staff members, such as Jis, bring back from the field help us to create the best possible solution for these communities.

For more information about RMF’s HIV/AIDS outreach programs in India, click here.

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Maria and Pankaj

The Importance of a Whole Health Approach: malnutrition and psychosocial neglect

By Jaimie Shaff

With malaria season at its peak and migrant families returning home, complicated cases of severe acute malnutrition (SAM) are presenting themselves at the NRC daily. In my short time here, I have seen a steady caseload of children presenting signs of tuberculosis, worms, malaria, diarrhea, and vomiting. For every child that comes into our NRC, we attempt to provide the best possible treatment, addressing underlying health conditions and symptomatic responses. Most complicated cases will flourish with antibiotics, de-worming tablets, and nutritional support while more serious cases might require a blood transfusion and vigilant monitoring.  Fortunately, medication and care is enough for most children.  Their ailments will be properly treated, their bodies will receive much needed nutritional support, and their caretakers will leave with new knowledge for malnutrition prevention.

However, there is another side to malnutrition in Madhya Pradesh that can’t be treated with pills or an IV—psychosocial neglect. In MP, there are many factors that lead to a decline in focus on the emotional development of children, such as parental employment, migration, and death. While the resiliency of children is naturally high, the ability to cope largely depends on temperament of the child and dynamics of the neglect.

Last week, a seven-year old girl, Maria, came to the NRC with a 3-year-old boy, Pankaj. Pankaj was found to be suffering from SAM complicated with a respiratory infection. Once he was admitted, it was noticed that he wasn’t interested in eating, was unresponsive to sensory stimulation, and appeared listless and sad. After some discussions with Maria and some other caretakers at the NRC, we figured out that Pankaj’s mother had passed away and his father migrated for work. Maria was Pankaj’s aunt and caretaker. Imagine being seven years old and handed a very sick three-year-old boy to care for.  Despite her age, Maria looked after Pankaj to the best of her ability, taking her motherly role in earnest.

Every time I went to the NRC, I worried about Pankaj. I had never seen a child in such a depressed state. Even Urmila, our 9-month-old suffering from malaria-induced anemia, was responsive to stimulation.  Pankaj would not play, walk, talk, or crawl. He ate with a cloak of reluctance and, when left alone, would suddenly start screaming until Maria returned. When I caught the rare glance from Pankaj, I found myself overwhelmed with sadness. His eyes told the story his voice could not.

One day, Pankaj was sitting on the floor by himself with a pile of rocks, barely moving.  I had noticed that Pankaj had a slightly enlarged head and appeared to only use one side of his body in his rare attempts to scoot across the floor. I sat down to play with him, and felt incredibly accomplished when I finally got a smile and a laugh. I watched as he demonstrated equal muscular strength, reflexes, and spatial understanding. He even surprised me with his ability to process thought when it came to counting, adding, and removing objects from his visual field. For all intensive purposes, Pankaj was significantly less developmentally challenged than we had thought. Maria returned and tried to get him to walk again. Typically, Pankaj would scream and go limp in his legs. This time he walked!

The next day I walked into the NRC and Pankaj smiled with recognition. He then grabbed my hand and began to walk. You cannot imagine the emotions that flooded into my being as I saw the effect a small amount of inter-personal play can have. With just a half-hour of attention the previous day, Pankaj began to smile, interact, and react with myself and others. Pankaj was not just starved for nutrients—he was starved for attention.

When Fabian, our Country Director came down to check on patients, he noticed Pankaj’s stature—the enlarged head, downward glance, etc. The initial diagnosis is that Pankaj suffers from hydrocephalus, a disorder that causes cerebrospinal fluid to build up in the brain. This ailment typically requires a shunt to be placed to drain the fluid from the brain. Unfortunately, these procedures are rare in the developing world as they are costly and riddled with complications. Children who receive the procedure require rigorous monitoring, as the shunt can shift, become infected, or be rejected by the body.  For a child of 3-years old whose caretaker is a 7-year old girl, the operation is not an easy option.

Emotional support is essential to the betterment of a human life. Treating the medical issues without addressing the whole-developmental being is not enough. I am proud that RMF works to empower its staff to address the social and emotional needs of its patients.  With this step, we are working to improve every aspect of a person’s health to provide the best possible course of treatment. We may not be able to fix his hydrocephalus, but we can take a step to improve his quality of life right now, medically and mentally.

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By Jaimie Shaff

Program Manager: Health and Nutrition

This past Tuesday marked my 14th day in India, aka my deadline for registration with the government of India. Since landing in this beautiful country, I have hit the ground running. The programs developed and implemented by RMF-India are absolutely incredible. Despite the fact that I was here evaluating the malnutrition program in January, I was certainly unprepared for how much the programs have expanded. The community has become more familiar with the faces of Caitlin, Michael, Fabian, and the rest of the field-staff, and the programs are developing with a strong focus on community.

With some slight confusion, train travel, and broken Hindi, I finally registered with the government powers that be this morning. My handwritten FRO note is in my passport, and I’m about 60% sure that I’ll be able to leave the country in December without any major hurdles.

In my short time here, I have met with many of the major organizations contributing towards humanitarian and developmental efforts in under-nutrition and HIV/AIDS in India.  RMF is well received and respected by large organizations, as the only International NGO working directly with the Bhil tribal population in MP. I look forward to becoming more familiar with our programs, working to increase our efficacy and community-based sustainability, and creating technical/operating partnerships with other actors in this field.

For now, I am quickly adjusting to the fast life of Jhabua, squat toilets, regulated electricity, and all. Our landlady downstairs is attempting to teach me Hindi (difficult!), and I’m managing to keep up with my early morning yoga practice (while slowly converting the rest of the team into Ashtanga yogis!). It is exciting work this organization is doing in the world, and I’m very happy to be a part of the efforts.

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