48 Ehsaas Nashonuma Centres being established at 13 districts countrywide

E-Kachehri held to answer queries of Ehsaas beneficiaries
File Photo

ISLAMABAD, Jan 11 (APP): Around 48 Ehsaas Nashonuma Centers were being established in 13 districts of the country to provide health services and conditional cash transfers mainly to prevent children from stunting growth issue.

This was revealed during the introductory meeting of Ehsaas Nashonuma steering committee held here under the chairmanship of Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Social Protection and Poverty Alleviation, Dr. Sania Nishtar.

The steering committee members were briefed on the progress of Ehsaas Nashonuma programme that is being implemented in partnership with the provinces and World Food Programme.

Alongside, the steering committee’s Terms of References, strategic avenues for scaling up the programme, lessons from the first phase, priorities for quality enhancements, adaptations and integrations introduced in the design and roll out of the programme were discussed.

The committee also discussed coordination of nutrition specific programmes at the federal level to ensure cross-country, cross-ministerial, inter-sectoral and inter-provincial collaboration for prevention of stunting and malnutrition among children.

Nashonuma is a 3-year programme that delivers conditional cash transfers to the vulnerable pregnant women and mothers with children under two years, linked to the consumption of specialized nutritious food, immunizations, and attendance of health awareness sessions.

Turning policy into action, 48 Ehsaas Nashonuma Centres across 13 districts are being established countrywide at the district and Tehsil level to provide health services under one roof through the programme.

In keeping with geographical spread out of Balochistan, the Nashonuma Centres are also being opened at the basic health unit level to ensure easy access to the facility.

Reflecting on the expansion of the first phase from 7 to 13 of the nutritionally vulnerable districts in the country, Dr. Sania stated, “The first phase of Ehsaas Nashonuma provides a solid, context-driven and scalable model for integrating nutrition-sensitive approaches within social protection platforms.”

“The expansion of the programme will be anchored upon the lessons from the field, operational reviews and impact assessments that have been embedded in the conceptualization and design of Ehsaas Nashonuma”, she said.

The policy action is envisaged to address high rates of malnutrition in Pakistan where the highest burden is within the poorest segments of the population, she said.

Continuing, she said, “To enhance the programmatic and awareness outcomes of the Ehsaas Nashonuma in an effective manner, it is highly important to focus on the instructional beneficiary centred communication.”

The meeting was attended by two federal ministries and six provincial ministries representatives along with other officials from Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office, the World Bank, World Food Programme, World Health Organization, Asian Development Bank, UNICEF, Federal Expanded Programme for Immunization and Pakistan Poverty Alleviation Fund and Nashonuma operations team from BISP.

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