How This 44-Year-Old ASHA Worker Is Using Education To Transform Lives In Bengaluru Slums
Ameena Begum, an ASHA worker has been in the profession for over a decade, educating people on accessing healthcare services, ensuring good health and well-being.
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Ameena Begum, 44, is one of tens of thousands of all-female ground-level healthcare workers in India who are serving the local communities selflessly.
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As an ASHA (Accredited Social Health Activist) worker, Ameena Begum has played a crucial role in linking the community with the health system and making primary health care services accessible to those living in urban and rural areas.
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Prior to this, Ameena Begum worked in the rural areas of the capital. After completing several rounds of training, she moved to providing her services to shanties of urban areas.
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She has been educating the urban slums of Bengaluru on accessing healthcare provisions, ensuring the last-mile reach of the facilities and clearing misconceptions about contraception, family planning, mother's health, etc.
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Since the pandemic hit India, Ameena Begum has toiled, providing door-to-door services, tracing symptomatic patients, providing medications to the sick, educating them on the COVID-19 outbreak and precautions they need to take.
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The importance of her work goes far beyond just a profession as an income source. Ameena Begum says the impact of her work in people's lives is what pushes her to be on the field every day.
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