ASHA: Introduction - Village Health Stars
- ASHA: Accredited Social Health Activist.
- Female community health volunteer; vital link between community & public health system.
- Selection Criteria:
- Woman resident of the village (married/widow/divorced).
- Age: 25-45 years.
- Education: Preferably literate, ideally up to 10th standard.
- Good communication & leadership skills.
- Coverage Norm:
- 1 ASHA per 1000 population (general areas).
- Relaxed for tribal, hilly, desert areas (e.g., 1 ASHA per habitation).
- Accountable to the Village Panchayat/Gram Sabha.
- Launched under National Rural Health Mission (NRHM, 2005), now part of National Health Mission (NHM).
⭐ ASHA is primarily an honorary volunteer who receives performance-based incentives, not a fixed government salary.
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ASHA: Functions - Tasks & Triumphs
- Core Functions & Tasks:
- Health education & counseling: Maternal & Child Health (MCH), nutrition, family planning, sanitation, hygiene.
- Mobilize community for health services: Immunization, Antenatal Care (ANC), Postnatal Care (PNC).
- Escort services: To facilities for institutional delivery, immunization, emergencies.
- Home-Based Newborn Care (HBNC) visits.
- DOTS provider for Tuberculosis; Malaria: RDTs, presumptive treatment.
- Depot holder: ORS, Iron Folic Acid (IFA), contraceptives, basic medicines.
- Report vital events (births, deaths); maintain essential records.
- Facilitate Village Health, Sanitation & Nutrition Committee (VHSNC) meetings.
- Key Triumphs:
- ↑ Institutional deliveries, comprehensive ANC/PNC coverage.
- ↑ Full immunization coverage in children.
- Significant ↓ in Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) & Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR).
- Improved community health awareness & health-seeking behaviors.

⭐ ASHA acts as a depot holder for essential provisions and typically serves a population of 1000.
ASHA: Support Systems - Training & Teamwork
- Training:
- Initial: 23 days, structured in modules (e.g., 5 core modules).
- Focus: MCH, immunization, family planning, nutrition, DOTS, first-aid, communication.
- Periodic refresher training and skill enhancement.
- Teamwork & Support:
- Mentoring & guidance: ANM, AWW, Medical Officer (MO).
- Regular review meetings at Sub-centre/PHC.
- Support from VHSNC/PRI.
- Performance-based monetary incentives.
⭐ ASHA's training is competency-based, typically involving 23 days spread over several months in distinct modules.
CHWs: Linkages - ASHA & Allies
- ASHA (Accredited Social Health Activist): Primary community interface.
- Coordinates with Anganwadi Worker (AWW): ICDS, nutrition, health education.
- Supports ANM (Auxiliary Nurse Midwife): Immunisation, MCH, referrals, Sub-Centre activities.
- Member of VHSNC (Village Health Sanitation and Nutrition Committee).
- Key Allies:
- AWW: Focus on child development, maternal nutrition.
- ANM: Skilled care, facility-based services.

⭐ ASHA acts as a crucial link between the community and the public health system, facilitating access to services and promoting health-seeking behaviours among rural populations for schemes like JSY and JSSK.
ASHA Program: Evaluation - Gains & Gaps
- Gains:
- Improved access: ↑ Antenatal Care (ANC), institutional deliveries, immunization
- Better maternal & child health (MCH) outcomes
- Strengthened community-health system interface
- Gaps:
- High workload; inadequate/delayed performance-based incentives
- Insufficient training, irregular supplies
- Weak supportive supervision
- Overemphasis on curative tasks vs. promotive/preventive
⭐ ASHA (Accredited Social Health Activist) must be a woman resident of the village, preferably aged 25-45 years, with formal education up to class 8th, and good communication skills.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- ASHA (Accredited Social Health Activist): A trained female community health volunteer.
- Acts as a key link between the community and the public health system.
- Focuses on Maternal & Child Health (MCH), immunization, family planning, and basic care.
- Receives performance-based incentives, not a fixed salary.
- Norm: One ASHA per 1000 population (flexible for difficult areas).
- Crucial for JSY & JSSK success, promoting institutional deliveries and newborn care.
- AWW (Anganwadi Worker): Manages Anganwadi centers focusing on child nutrition and pre-school education (ICDS).
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