Many Babies Die in Nepal
RABINDRA Thapa, 24, a community health worker associated with Save the Children (USA) is making his rounds through the communities of north Gorkha. At the village of Archalay in Lakury Bot Panchayat, a five-year-old boy is clearly in the last stages of terminal pneumonia. He was breathing fast, his nostrils flared, his pulse was racing at more than 50 per minute, and Thapa could see the suction in through the rib cage as the child struggled to breathe. The lips and finger-tips were already discoloured.
The father, who was hovering over the prostrate child with incense in his hands, said the jhankri (shaman) had just been in. His son was down with the "Nepali byatha", he said using the term used in that area to identify mysterious afflictions imported from Kathmandu (still "Nepal" to many villagers). Frustrated, and unable to convince the household that the child had to be taken to hospital in Gorkha, Thapa continued on his rounds. A month later, he met the father on the trail and was informed that "baccha khera gayo". The child had been "wasted".