Page 2 - இந்தியா தேசிய குடும்பம் ஆரோக்கியம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Modi s government at crossroads as farmers protests grow louder
azerbaijannews.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from azerbaijannews.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Roots of India s farming crisis goes beyond new laws
pakistantelegraph.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pakistantelegraph.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Period charts help young Indian women end menstruation shame
The topic has long been taboo in a country with about 350 million women of menstruating age
Anvi Aggarwal, 15, a school student from Chandigarh in Punjab state has started recording her period dates in a period chart to raise awareness about health menstrual cycle. Taniya Dutta for The National
Monika holds the Period Chart that she has put up at her home in Haryana.The chart is an initiative by Sunil Jaglan, a social worker to raise awareness about menstrual health. Taniya Dutta for The National
Monika holds the Period Chart that she has put up at her home in Haryana.The chart is an initiative by Sunil Jaglan, a social worker to raise awareness about menstrual health. Taniya Dutta for The National
Study: Having children three years apart can prevent child stunting
Having children at least three years apart can help prevent stunting in children, says a study carried out in India.
The study, based on data of 223,662 children aged under five in India s National Family Health Survey-4 (NFHS-4), carried out during 2015 2016, shows that firstborn children were typically taller than later-born children when the time interval between the births was less than three years. But if the time interval between the births was three years or more, then firstborn children have no height advantage. We show that later-born children lag behind firstborns in stunting outcomes, researchers wrote in a paper, published late February in
Nisha Devi, who lost her baby due to anaemia
Credit: Cheena Kapoor
A loving husband, a steady income, and a healthy child on the way – at the beginning of last year Nisha Devi s future seemed bright. Then, her life started crumbling.
On March 22, with just four hours’ notice, a nationwide lockdown was imposed on India. As businesses and other activities ground to a halt, workers, especially migrant labourers like Devi s husband Sandeep Kumar, lost their livelihoods. Sandeep – along with hundreds of thousands of others – returned to their home villages to sit out the pandemic.
Days turned into months. With the family’s income reduced to almost nothing, there were days when the young couple had barely enough to eat. Then the government delivered the final blow by suspending its nutritional programmes.
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.