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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.

How This 44-Year-Old ASHA Worker Is Using Education To Transform Lives In Bengaluru Slums

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.

How This 44-Year-Old ASHA Worker Is Using Education To Transform Lives In Bengaluru Slums

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.

How This 44-Year-Old ASHA Worker Is Using Education To Transform Lives In Bengaluru Slums

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.

How This 44-Year-Old ASHA Worker Is Using Education To Transform Lives In Bengaluru Slums

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.

How This 44-Year-Old ASHA Worker Is Using Education To Transform Lives In Bengaluru Slums

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.

How This 44-Year-Old ASHA Worker Is Using Education To Transform Lives In Bengaluru Slums

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.

About The Campaign

About The Campaign

NDTV in partnership with Luminous has launched an awareness campaign ‘Be A Bijli Donor’ to promote the idea of ‘save power for more power’. The idea is to conserve energy today in order to get more power tomorrow.

 

We inherently know that saving energy results in low energy bills, but we also need to understand that a unit of energy saved today makes it available for people still living in the dark or facing regular power cuts.

 

Saving power or conserving energy is about knowing the sources of energy, and areas of wastage and thereby eliminating these through technology and lifestyle changes. For instance, a 100 W (Watt) incandescent (ICL) bulb can be replaced with a 9 W LED bulb offering similar performance in terms of light output, but at far lower consumption of energy.

 

While a 100 W ICL bulb, used for four hours a day, consumes 146 units of energy per year, a 9 W LED bulb requires only 13.5 units per year. Clearly, switching to LED is a smart choice as it provides the same output while consuming 90 per cent less energy.

 

The focus of the campaign is to instill the idea of ‘save power for more power’ and in order to do so, the initiative will create awareness about energy efficient products and services, smart ways to reduce power consumption, alternate sources of energy like solar energy and the need to conserve energy. The idea is to address the rising need for energy conservation in India.

 

As part of the campaign, we will highlight the stories of individuals and organisations who are championing the cause of energy conservation by switching to renewable sources of energy, adopting innovations to reduce energy consumption while enjoying the same output. The initiative will provide a platform for all stakeholders to share their ideas and work towards the common goal of, ‘Save power for more power’.