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BRAC and Afghan Ministry examine children's rights


On 13 November 2013, BRAC signed a Memorandum of Understanding  with Afghanistan's Ministry of Labour, Social Affairs, Martyrs and Disabled. The memorandum examines children's rights policies, codes of conduct, and other supporting legal materials regarding improving conditions of children. Under the memorandum, BRAC will be a member of the Child Protection Action Network in Afghanistan. The Ministry will also support all initiatives to protect and care for children in families and communities in Afghanistan where BRAC is active



In an event held at BRAC Centre on December 22, 2013, Secretary for Ministry of Health and Family Welfare Mr.M M Neazuddin mentioned that Vision Bangladesh project should be replicated all across the nation. Terming access to eye healthcare as a basic right of the people, he stressed on the need to excel eye care services for improved quality of life of the community people. He further mentioned that the Ministry will provide all out support for the implementation of this intervention. 

Vision Bangladesh Phase- I is a unique intervention implemented by BRAC and Sightsavers under the guidance of National Eye Care (NEC) which aims to avert preventable blindness through cataract surgery. The Public Private Partnership (PPP) model in implementing this project in the grassroots has created an example itself mirroring that such coordinated initiatives can bring about dramatic outcomes. 

According to Bangladesh National Blindness and Low Vision Survey 2000 about 750,000 adults aged above thirty years are completely blind out of which eighty percent are due to cataract related complications. The survey also mirrors that about five million people including children suffer from refractive errors.  Evidence suggests that about 90% of such blindness and low vision can be prevented with proper and timely management.

Dr. Kaosar Afsana, Director of BRAC’s Health, Nutrition and Population Programme mentioned that about 110,000 cataract surgeries were conducted in Sylhet division in phase-I and now the project is scaling up to 10 urban areas along with few selected rural districts. She further mentioned that NEC’s continuing support and guidance has made vision Bangladesh a successful role model in the eye care services. 

Prof. Dr. Deen Mohd. Noorul Haq Line Director, National Eye Care-DGHS and Director cum Professor, National Institute of Ophthalmology & Hospital mentioned that BRAC has shown remarkable progress in mobilizing and counselling patients in the rural area further stating that the target of 100,000 for three years cataract surgeries could not be reached before the end of project period without the extensive support of BRAC. 

Later a memorandum of understanding (MoU) was signed between National Eye Care and BRAC which will allow BRAC to continue its operation in Sylhet division for addressing upcoming cataract cases and hard to reach areas.

 

By Sir Fazle Hasan Abed.  
Dhaka, 21 November,

"2013  Hon’ble President of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh His Excellency Mr Md Abdul Hamid, Hon’ble Minister, Editor in Chief of the Lancet Dr Richard Horton, Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen,

Good afternoon!
 
It is indeed a great pleasure for me to be here and chair the launch of the Lancet Series on Bangladesh. The Series as we have heard has portrayed Bangladesh’s achievements in the health sector over the past four decades. We are very proud of our achievements and also mindful of our responsibilities to keep the momentum going and bring better health and wellbeing to our people.

Many people here from the government, civil society, private sector have worked hard, and continue to do so, improving conditions for others. Rarely do we take the time to reflect on the gains we have made here in Bangladesh. It is worth doing so, for these gains are historically unprecedented. And I am convinced they are of value to other countries facing circumstances similar to what we experienced in our recent history.

Ladies and gentlemen, we are all witnesses to a health revolution!  

Within the lifetime of all of us, we have seen a quiet revolution in the quality of health in this country. It has been said that such rapid gains in quality of life have never been seen before – in the history of all humanity.  

To give but one example: Within recent memory, the situation was grim for an expectant mother in rural Bangladesh. In the 1990s, despite the gains we had seen since liberation, we still had a frighteningly high maternal mortality rate, comparable to what we see today in many parts of sub-Saharan Africa. For every 100,000 live births in the country in 1990, we had 500 to 600 dying from complications during childbirth – usually for entirely preventable reasons.  

Now, in most parts of the country, we are likely to meet the Millennium Development Goal of bringing maternal mortality down to less than 150 deaths per 100,000 live births. There is still much to be done, of course. In Sri Lanka that rate is just 35, and in Norway it is 3.

Still, when combined with other gains, the progress is staggering. As I wrote in my commentary for this publication, maternal mortality has dropped 75% since 1980, infant mortality has more than halved since 1990, and life expectancy at birth has risen to 69 years. Such changes have almost no historical precedent. It is said that only Japan’s modernization in the 19th century, following the Meiji Restoration, can rival this change.  

So how did we do it? One answer is by turning to poor rural women to carry out the task of improving public health. And importantly, we worked on her terms. I will give an example. BRAC, took oral rehydration therapy to a national scale in the 1980s. Our mission was to put an end to needless deaths from children’s diarrhoea, one of the greatest killers.  

To combat this, we turned to the solution first reported in The Lancet in 1968, when this journal published the first results from a successful trial of oral rehydration therapy, which used a simple but precise mixture of water, sugar and salt to quickly rehydrate children suffering from diarrhoea.  

But when we tried to scale this up, we initially found that many rural women understandably didn’t recognize the concept of a “half litre of water.” Without that basic knowledge, it might seem difficult to mix the solution properly. And we knew that lack of precision in mixing the solution could be a dangerous thing.  

But what the women did know very well was their own household containers. So we began by asking them for the containers they normally use, and then we helped them scratch marks on them – so they knew exactly how much a half litre was.  

And of course there was much more trial and error. An initial evaluation found that only 6% of these women had retained and used the knowledge. So we went back again and refined the training. By 1990, we had reached 70% of the households in the country, and today nearly every Bangladeshi household use oral rehydration therapy.

I feel this story is important because it underscores the necessity of putting the most vulnerable patients – who are often rural women and their children – at the heart of public health interventions. Eventually we realised that gender equality and women’s rights would drive public health gains.  

Ladies and gentlemen, I believe this is true everywhere – in other parts of Asia, as well as in sub-Saharan Africa. Everywhere that women struggle, anyplace that poor people fall victim to preventable diseases, it is vital to put empowered women at the centre of the intervention.  

As we all have seen in Bangladesh, the result is a virtuous circle. Better health leads to prosperity, and prosperity in turn leads to better health.  

Based on this experience, I believe that the women of Bangladesh are a model for the world – and that the revolution we have seen in our lifetimes can be repeated elsewhere.  

Thank you Hon’ble President for gracing this event. Your presence means a lot to the efforts that the government, civil society, the private sector and, more importantly, the people are undertaking in creating a healthy and prosperous Bangladesh. May I also take this opportunity to express our gratitude to the Lancet for publishing such an illuminating Series exclusively on our country.

Thank you."

 

Friday, 29 November 2013 18:00

One billion to rise in 2014



Every week in Bangladesh, more than 10 women suffer from some form of violence. In India, 22 women are killed every day in dowry-related murders, while in Sri Lanka, 60 per cent of women report having suffered physical abuse. Additionally, in Pakistan, more than 450 women and girls die every year in so-called “honour killings,” and incidents of human trafficking in Nepal are still highly prevalent.



Numerous women’s rights organizations and NGOs have taken the initiative to fight against violence and discrimination against women in South Asia. One Billion Rising (OBR), a global campaign to end violence against woman, took place on February 14, 2013. In Bangladesh approximately three million men and women gathered on the streets with support from over 400 organizations across 206 countries. 

On November 30, 2013, One Billion Rising for Justice (OBR4J), the second phase of the campaign, was launched in Bangladesh at the Shilpakala Academy, in Jatiya Natyashala, Dhaka. The launch was organised by Sangat, a South Asian feminist network and Nijera Kori, Bangladesh. The event included introductions from writer, feminist and coordinator of OBR’s South Asian chapter, Kamla Bhasin, and women’s rights activist and coordinator of OBR Bangladesh, Khushi Kabir. There was also a memorial for feminist activist, Sunila Abayasekara, announcement of the Meeto Memorial Award for social commitment, and songs dedicated to South Asian women and their struggles. 

Kamla Bhasin launched the South Asian chapter of the second phase of this campaign, calling on men and women to rise against injustice.  She said, “This is the greatest war ever, and violence against women cannot and will not be tolerated anymore. We have been fighting this battle for centuries, for decades and the time is put our concerted efforts [together].”  

OBR4J is an invitation to break free from confinement, obligation, shame, guilt, grief, pain, humiliation, rage, and bondage. It a revolutionary global call to survivors to release their stories through art, dance, marches, ritual, song, spoken word, or testimonies.

The launch included dance performances by the group Shadhona. A flash mob was also performed by a group of women who work in the ready-made garments (RMG) industry. These women had also faced violence in the form of acid attacks, domestic violence and sexual assault. Their performance to OBR’s theme song “Break the chain” portrayed the strength and power of women to rise and move forward. 

It is within this context that OBR4J South Asia was launched on November 30, 2013. “Our work for this campaign begins now. From today we will rise for justice in every form,” said Kamla Bhasin. In the lead up to the landmark event set to take place on February 14, 2014, numerous events and actions will take place engaging a wide range of stakeholders. 

 

CONTACT:
Chiraranjan Sarker 88 01730347963
Tanveer Ahmed Khan 88 01816361158
One Billion Rising Bangladesh, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

26 November 2013, Dhaka.  

- BRAC recognised for its comprehensive mother, infant and child health package

- The Award is the first initiative delivered as part of ambitious partnership between GSK and Save the Children that aims to save a million children’s lives

An innovative programme by development organisation BRAC transforming health for women and children in Dhaka’s slums has been awarded a prize in the first global GSK and Save the Children $1million Healthcare Innovation Award.

BRAC is one of five organisations, from a long list of nearly 100 applications from 29 countries from across the developing world, selected to share the award. It will receive $300,000 to pilot test its programme, called Manoshi, in the slums of Freetown, Sierra Leone, where under-five and maternal mortality rates are amongst the highest in the world.  

The Manoshi programme offers a comprehensive package of health services to mothers, infants and children. To meet their health needs and challenges, Manoshi has three key innovations that provide holistic solutions, including: 

  • Simple, clean delivery rooms for new mothers
  • Quick access to emergency health services for those who could not afford it
  • Digital data collection on patients for more efficient health service delivery

The Bangladesh-based NGO, founded in 1972, plays a significant part in the push to reduce Bangladesh’s own under-five and maternal mortality rates, the latter of which has seen a 40 per cent drop in a decade. 

A judging panel of experts from the fields of public health and development1, co-chaired by Sir Andrew Witty, CEO of GSK, and Justin Forsyth, Chief Executive of Save the Children, including Dr Abbas Bhuiya, Interim Executive Director of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, were impressed with the south-led innovation and the viability and impact of Manoshi and its potential to transform health for growing urban populations in Bangladesh and in Sierra Leone. 

Azizul Huq, Managing Director at GSK Bangladesh, said: “This remarkable project shows what can be achieved through innovation from within those closest to healthcare challenges faced by developing countries and we are delighted to be able to recognise the hard work of all involved. It has saved lives of mothers and children in Bangladesh and can make a difference for the people of Sierra Leone.”

Dr. Kaosar Afsana, Director of BRAC's Health, Nutrition and Population Programme said: “It is an honour to be recognised and awarded for the work we are doing in Bangladesh through our Manoshi programme. We thank GSK and Save the Children for the award money, which will be used to take the programme to Freetown, Sierra Leone, demonstrating excellent South-South collaboration.”

The partnership between GSK and Save the Children aims to deliver a new model for corporate-charity working to help save the lives of a million children.

BRAC Institute of Global Health’s (BIGH) midwifery department is leading a community-based midwifery diploma programme (CMDP), in partnership with national non-governmental implementing partner organisations (IPOs). This innovative educational initiative, funded by DFID, with technical support from Jhpiego, the Obstetrical and Gynaecological Society of Bangladesh (OGSB) and the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine (LSTM), is the first of its kind in the private sector of Bangladesh. 

The programme is designed to recruit students from remote and underserved areas with high maternal and newborn health needs, build their capacity through a three-year residential diploma in midwifery and deploy midwives in their respective communities upon graduation. 

November 9, 2013 marked a special day for the programme and its first-year midwifery students. BRAC’s founder and chairperson, Sir Fazle Hasan Abed visited Shimantik and FIVDB, two Sylhet-based IPOs. Accompanying Sir Fazle were Dr Ahmed Mushtaque Raza Chowdhury, BRAC vice-chair, Faruque Ahmed, executive director of BRAC International programmes, Dr Kaosar Afsana, director of BRAC’s health programme, Ismat Bhuiya, director of the midwifery programme, and other staff. The high profile visit was intended to strengthen links between BRAC and the BIGH and build a workforce dedicated to saving the lives of mothers and newborns in communities.


Students interacting with the BRAC founder and chair and the BRAC vice-chair while presenting academic posters

The BRAC founder and chairperson and senior executives visited the academic and residential facilities of Shimantik in Sylhet and FIVDB in Khadimnagar, meeting students, faculty, clinical preceptors and programme personnel. The first-year students enrolled in BRAC University’s midwifery programme introduced themselves, and informed the high profile visitors of the union each student represents. In a question and answer session that followed, Sir Fazle asked students questions on the modules covered in their curriculum, which include topics related to health systems, community health, the role of midwives, life cycle nutrition, basic sciences, antenatal care and birth preparedness, childbirth and immediate newborn care, breastfeeding and postnatal care, as well as others.

Student discussing community health with Sir Fazle and senior BRAC executives

Students also discussed with Sir Fazle the importance of using visual aids in their learning and tools like partographs to assess the progress of labour. Sir Fazle spoke to students about being advocates of knowledge on safe motherhood within their local communities, dispelling myths and practices that harm mothers and their newborns. He emphasised the importance of actively engaging in their own communities through excellent service and expressed BRAC’s support in helping them become leaders in the field of maternal and newborn health.

“As members of the first batch of this programme, you will avail plenty of opportunities and emerge as champions in your chosen profession. Some of you will go on to earn your BSc in midwifery, others will one day earn a PhD. Work hard and success will come to you in different forms. For some, success will appear as leadership positions in the field of midwifery both at home and abroad. For others, success will mean having a record of not letting a single mother you have cared for over your career die during childbirth.” 

- Sir Fazle Hasan Abed, BRAC Founder and Chair

The visit offered a unique opportunity for students to interact directly with Sir Fazle and the senior executives of BRAC, as they answered Sir Fazle’s questions about their educational experience and professional ambitions and discussed what healthy motherhood would look like for Bangladeshi mothers with midwives available in every union. 

 “When I was working as a data collector on a research project on CBS, as led by BRAC and icddr,b, I watched a video on Sir Fazle and his tremendous contributions to health, education and development in Bangladesh. Today was a dream come true for me. I got to see Sir Fazle in person. I’m not forgetting today.”

 

-  Shamsunnahar, 27, a first-year midwifery student and a mother of two from Dewargaach Union, Chunarughat



 



Saturday 23 November, 2013, Dhaka.

Twelve disabled survivors from the Rana Plaza building collapse received their mechanical prosthetic limbs from BRAC today at an informal event held at BRAC Brace and Limb Centre (BLBC) in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The development organisation also announced it is providing fixed deposits of BDT 100,000 for each of the 12 survivors to support their long-term rehabilitation.

Since the tragic incident in Savar on April 24, 2013, BRAC has been working in close collaboration with the National Institute of Traumatology, Orthopedics and Rehabilitation (NITOR), Ministry of Health and Family Welfare under the leadership of the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) to support survivors. So far, BLBC had supported 26 patients in NITOR with free Taylor Braces.

Dr. Zulfikar Ali Lenin, Director Health, Prime Minister’s Office, Prof Kh Abdul Awal Rizvi, Director NITOR, Vice Chairperson of BRAC and BRAC's senior directors were present at the event.

Dr Ali shared how the government had taken the initiative to prepare a list of all victims of the Rana Plaza building collapse, categorised them based on their type of injury and provided emergency healthcare support to the survivors. He also mentioned that the government has taken initiatives to mitigate any repetition of such incidents. 

Dr Kaosar Afsana, Director of BRAC’s health, nutrition and population programme (HNPP) said BRAC is happy to play an important role in supporting some of the survivors of the tragic incident and hoped that repetition of such a tragedy would not take place in the future.

Vice-chairperson of BRAC, Dr Ahmed Mushtaque Raza Chowdhury, acknowledged the importance of the garment sector's contribution to the economy of Bangladesh, adding, "Such intra-sector collaboration can ensure delivery of timely and quality services to the community people". 

 


Dhaka/London, 14 November 2013. An innovative programme by development organisation BRAC transforming health for women and children in Dhaka’s slums has been awarded a prize in the first global GlaxoSmithKline and Save the Children $1million Healthcare Innovation Award.

BRAC is one of five organisations, from a long list of nearly 100 applications from 29 countries from across the developing world, selected by the judging panel to share the award. It will receive $300,000 to pilot test its programme, called Manoshi, in the slums of Freetown, Sierra Leone, where under-five and maternal mortality rates are amongst the highest in the world.

The Manoshi programme offers a comprehensive package of health services to mothers, infants and children. To meet their health needs and challenges, Manoshi has three key innovations that provide holistic solutions, including: 

  • Simple, clean delivery rooms for new mothers
  • Quick access to emergency health services for those who could not afford it
  • Digital data collection on patients for more efficient health service delivery

The Bangladesh-based NGO, founded in 1972, plays a significant part in the push to reduce Bangladesh’s own under-five and maternal mortality rates, the latter of which has seen a 40 per cent drop in a decade.

A judging panel of experts from the fields of public health and development1, co-chaired by Sir Andrew Witty, CEO of GSK, and Justin Forsyth, Chief Executive of Save the Children, including Dr Abbas Bhuiya, Interim Executive Director of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, were impressed with the south-led innovation and the viability and impact of Manoshi and its potential to transform health for growing urban populations in Bangladesh and in Sierra Leone. 

Azizul Huq, Bangladesh Country Manager at GSK, said: “This remarkable project shows what can be achieved through south-led innovation and we are delighted to be able to recognise the hard work of all involved. It has saved lives of mothers and children in Bangladesh and can make a difference for the people of Sierra Leone.” 

Dr. Kaosar Afsana, Director of BRAC's Health, Nutrition and Population Programme said: “It is an honour to be recognised and awarded for the work we are doing in Bangladesh through our Manoshi programme. We thank GSK and Save the Children for the award money, which will be used to take the programme to Freetown, Sierra Leone, demonstrating excellent South-South collaboration.”

The partnership between GSK and Save the Children aims to deliver a new model for corporate-charity working to help save the lives of a million children.

 




We are glad to inform you that BRAC has received the 'Best Employer Award 2012’ from bdjobs.com in the Development category.With this year's award, BRAC holds the unique distinction of getting this award for the last 3 times.  

The selection of the award winning organisations has been based on a perception survey participated by 3,873 bdjobs.com users. BRAC employees’ vote have not been counted in this survey. BRAC has been selected for the award from 1,341 different organisations based on the following indicators: 

  • Work Environment
  • Management Culture & Practice
  • Career Prospect
  • Brand
  • Competitive salary & other benefits

 

Tuesday, 24 September 2013 18:00

Radio Pollikontho wins Meena Media Award 2013

25 September 2013, Dhaka. Community Radio Pollikontho (99.2 FM), an initiative of BRAC Community Empowerment Programme (CEP), has been awarded the Meena Media Award 2013.  The award, organised by UNICEF, honors both print and electronic streams for their outstanding work in promoting child rights using the respective medium.

BRAC’s community radio, based in Moulvibazar district, took part in the competition with its programme “Alor Bhuban” (enlightened world) which won the second position under Radio Category-Creative Programme. Radio Today and Bangladesh Betar were awarded first and third position respectively.

Senior Station Manager Md. Mehedi Hasan received the award from Honorable Minister, Ministry of Information Hasanul Haque Inu at a ceremony in the capital's Hotel Ruposhi Bangla, Dhaka yesterday on the occasion of Meena Day.  The first, second, and third award recipients received Tk 50,000, Tk 25,000 and Tk 15,000 respectively along with a crest & certificate. UNICEF Bangladesh representative Pascel Villeneuve, UNICEF’s Goodwill Ambassadors, actress Mousumi & magician Jewel Aich, were present on the occasion.

The Meena Media Award was introduced by UNICEF in 2005 to celebrate excellence in both print and electronic media on child rights issues. More than 500 reports & programmes, both in print and electronic media, were submitted to the authorities this year on six categories.

Community Radio Pollikontho 99.2 FM, was launched in 2011 at Moulvibazar district with the aim to increase access to information and also strengthen grassroots voice, especially of women. The radio station covers a radius of 17 kilometers reaching nearly 400,000 rural people of the four sub districts of Moulvibazar district broadcasting 8 hrs a day. The programmes are designed to address socio-economic issues within the community, prioritising on women and children.  Currently, 690 listeners clubs have been formed to ensure greater community engagement with the radio station. Earlier in July this year, Radio Pollikontho was also awarded the first position in Family Planning Media Award 2012-2013 competition organised by Family Planning Directorate of Ministry of Health & Family Planning, Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh in cooperation with UNFPA.

 

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