Members of the University of New South Wales Medical Students Aid Project (MSAP) are passionate about making a difference in health both globally and locally. Medical students Heeral Thakkar and Sharanya Mohan are the Projects Officers for the university society. Under the auspices of MSAP, they have established Food for Thought, a project designed to provide nutritionally fortified meals for 150 students at a rural school, Seem Shala Jibhaipura, in Nadiad, Gujarat. The aim is to improve childhood nutrition and school attendance rates, and also raise awareness about basic health through educational videos for the children. n December 2015, Heeral visited Nadiad in Gujarat, India and met Kishore Bhinde, a plastics manufacturer. Once a year, he visits schools on the outskirts of Nadiad and provides wholesome meals to the children. She accompanied him on one of these trips and realised that across all the four schools they visited, the children were lethargic, unable to concentrate and severely malnourished. Sharanya and Heeral decided that they wanted to change this, and that is how the Food for Thought Project was born. We provide a nutritional supplement three times a week to 150 school children aged between four and 12 years old. The supplement consists of milk with Bournvita, one fruit, dates and masala chana. This boosts micronutrients, such as Vitamin B12 and iron, and macronutrients such as protein. We also send basic health education videos every four months to teach healthy habits like washing hands, staying clean, and other practices to prevent the spread of communicable diseases. When we visited the school in September, we saw how eagerly the children had watched the video we sent earlier in the year as they proudly displayed their handwashing technique! Heeral knew about the Midday Meal Scheme (MDM) in India (a government program which provides one cooked meal per day for children in school), which made her wonder, Why are these children still malnourished? She discussed these issues with Mr Bhinde and, after reading several journal articles on the MDM scheme, they found that many of the intended benefits of the program do not get to the children. The food is often unhygienically prepared, in small quantities and with no fresh fruits or vegetables. Gujarat, according to the Ministry of Human Resources and Development, ranked 25th out of all states in its performance in the MDM. Since the initiation of Food for Thought, the progress made has been beyond what we have imagined. This project has inspired the Collector to commission the building of two new classrooms to facilitate a Year 7 class and two new teachers! Additionally, a bore well has been built to have clean running water to drink and encourage washing of hands before and after meals and after using the toilet. A local soap supplier has also donated liquid soap to the school. Despite all the progress that Food for Thought has made at Seem Shala Jibhaipura, the trip also revealed many avenues for expansion. There is so much more to be done! For example, the toilets at the school are unhygienic and decrepit. MSAP hopes to rebuild these along with toilet sinks by 2017. In the next few years, we hope that the project will also extend to a second school, Seem Shala Chalapura, which currently has 40 students.
Food for Thought
Two Aussie medical students HEERAL THAKKAR and SHARANYA MOHAN are helping provide nutritional meals to school children in India
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