Flouride levels in 493 villages are exceptionally high.
Fluorosis Se Jung aims to help residents protect themselves from its effects. Soumya Mathew
In August, Palak Ramesh showed no hesitation when the teacher at her
government school in Haryana’s Khedli Khurd village asked her to spell
out her name. But the next moment, when the 13-year-old student was
asked to demonstrate a few stretching exercises, her confidence ebbed.
When Ramesh tries to touch her ankles or stretch her arms, her joints,
back and shoulders ache.
That pain seemed bearable. A more agonising wave of embarrassment
swept over Ramesh and the quiet group of teenagers who had gathered
around her when they smiled – they were conscious of their yellowing
teeth. It’s not that they had ignored good dental-health practices. “Hum
har din brush karte hai,” protested Ramesh’s friend Arseena Vakeel. We
brush every day.
They are among the thousands of people in the region who suffer from
dental fluorosis, or mottling of teeth, one of the most common effects
of drinking fluoride-contaminated water. In March, the fluoride level in
the groundwater of their village was recorded as 14 mg/litre of water. A
level of 1mg or less is considered normal. Fluoride
is the second-most common pollutant of drinking water in India, said
Tarit Roychowdhury, an associate professor at the School of
Environmental Studies, Jadavpur University Click To Tweet.
“Upon entering the body, the fluoride attacks calcium-enriched organs
like teeth and bones – the former more than the latter,” he said. “This
is why dental fluorosis is so common.” Palak Ramesh.
Khedli Khurd is one of the 439 villages in Haryana’s Mewat district
that has to deal with excessive flouride in its groundwater. Over the
years, NGOs have attempted to make villagers aware of the problem and to
install water filteration plants
to help remedy it. In August, Alfaz-E-Mewat FM 107.8, a popular
community radio station in Mewat, launched what is perhaps the most
innovative effort to keep residents healthy. It kicked off a show titled
Fluorosis Se Jung, or Battle with Fluorosis. This eight-episode series includes dramas and question and answer sessions with doctors.
The station has also handed out 8,500 moringa, or drumstick, plants, a
species that is believed to help to reduce the effects of fluorosis.
According to a study published by the Journal of Industrial Pollution Control in 2007, moringa is an effective “defluoridating agent”. It recommended that both Moringa pod as well as the leaves should be part of the diet of people living in fluorotic areas.
How it started
The idea for the initiative struck Faakat Hussain, a radio jockey at Alfaz-E-Mewat who hosts a question and answer show Tere Mere Man Ki Baat in
March, when he received an on-air call from a shepherd from Khedli
Khurd. The caller’s 40-year-old wife was finding it increasingly
difficult to carry out her daily chores. When she worked in the fields
or collected grass from the nearby forest, both tasks involved a lot of
walking, her knees hurt.
During the course of that conversation, Hussain realised it was a
problem faced by many women in Khedli Khurd. Shortly after, he visited
the village with Dr Rizwan Khan, the district consultant appointed in
Mewat under the National Programme for Prevention and Control of
Fluorosis. They took a water sample from the village and Khan had it
examined it in a laboratory at Al-Afiya General Hospital, Mewat. The
water was found unfit for consumption.
(Left
to right) Pritam Singh, a teacher at the government middle school in
Khedli Khurd, Faakat Hussain, a radio jockey at Alfaz-E-Mewat and Sohrab
Khan, a teacher at the school.
Since there was no awareness about fluorosis in the village, Hussain
and his team decided to use the radio – the most common medium of
entertainment and information in the district – to talk about the
medical condition. The 20-minute sessions, hosted by Hussain, with Khan
and Sanjeet Panesar, assistant professor in the Department of Medicine
at Shaheed Hasan Khan Mewati Government Medical College, are brodcast
every Tuesday at 10.50 am. The show is repeated at 9.35 pm the same day.
Among the segments it has featured is a play on Fluorosis Se Jung, with
a man talking to his friends about how his wife struggles with swollen,
aching joints. His friends advise him to head to the Alfaz-E-Mewat
station and pick up some moringa plants to help his wife. The plays and
songs are aired twice or thrice every day.
“A lot of them still don’t know what fluorosis is, so we try to
communicate in ways they understand,” said Hussain. “For them, their
knees and ankles swelling translates to ‘ghutno mei hawa bharna’ or air
getting filled in their joints.”Moringa is a good cure for that [problem] and eventually explain fluorosis to them."
Alfaz-E-Mewat was established in 2012 by the Sehgal Foundation, a
charitable trust that is conducting research on flourosis. Lalit Mohan
Sharma of the foundation says that the spread of the disease has its
origins in region’s depleting groundwater levels. As residents dig
borewells that are ever deeper, they are reaching water contaminated by
fluoride-rich rocks.
The
deeper the borewell, the greater the fluoride levels in the
groundwater. Photo credit: ABHIJEET / Wikimedia Commons [CC Creative
Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported].
“Minerals such as calcium, magnesium and vitamin A and C are
excellent warriors against fluorosis,” said Sharma. “They are readily
available in milk and milk products. Since the villagers in Mewat cannot
afford milk on a daily basis, we found [that] the inexpensive
alternative of moringa plants [were] quite effective too.” Besides
packing in nutrients, studies have shown that moringa seeds are
adsorbents that can potentially remove fluoride from water. Click To Tweet
On August 7, Alfaz-E-Mewat invited several villagers, including
children, to the community radio’s centre at Ghaghas village for a
session conducted by Sharma, Khan and Panesar. They explained to the
villagers that swollen joints were more than just a case of “hawa
bharna” or air getting filled in their joints. Within two weeks after
the session, Hussain says, the first batch of moringa plants was almost
over.
The future
Mewat was added to the list of endemic regions by the National
Programme for Prevention and Control of Fluorosis in 2011-’12. But,
according to Khan, the government is yet to supply alternative sources
of drinking water or reverse osmosis facilitators to most villages. As a
result, villages like Khedli Khurd continue to depend on groundwater
sucked out through borewells.
Faizan.
“Should we die thirsty instead?” asked 53-year-old Faizan, a resident
of Khedli Khurd. Her son Jafruddin, 35, was diagnosed earlier this year
with avascular necrosis, a condition in which the blood supply to the
bones is obstructed. “I was in Gujarat for about 10 days after my doctor
asked me to move out of Mewat for a while,” said Jafruddin. “I felt
considerably better there, even without taking medicines. Now that I
have come back, I will have to depend on the medicines again to move
around.” When Jafruddin tried to squat on the floor, his teeth clenched
in pain.
Sohrab Khan, who has been teaching at the government school for the
past six years, feels he is losing his agility, even though he does not
stay in the village. “I can sense stiffness in my joints,” he said.
“Since I am here for most part of the day, I end up drinking the water
at the school.” Sohrab Khan is among those who took a moringa plant from
Alfaz-E-Mewat, hoping it would stave off the symptoms of ageing he is
facing in his 30s.
Jafruddin.
Hussain is unsure what direction the fluorosis-awareness programme
will take once the radio series ends. But the change in the villagers’
approach towards the condition has been heartening. “When they had come
for the session in early August, many of them thought their problems
were just a part of ageing,” he said. “Now many are careful. At least,
that’s what their eagerness to grow moringa in their houses shows.”
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