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Wednesday, January 02, 2019

Women in science are made to feel like impostors

An absorbed fear that you are not good enough might look like the smallest of the obstacles women in STEM fields face. The All India Survey on Higher Education 2017-18 estimates that 40% of the undergraduates in science and engineering are women, but women make up only 14% of scientists, engineers and technologists employed in research and development institutions.

When I introduce myself to people outside the worlds of science and engineering, I often joke that I am a rocket scientist. It’s not untrue: I studied aerospace engineering both in college and graduate school. Some ask why I am not a rocket scientist anymore. I have an arsenal of responses ranging from poetic (“I was fascinated by flight, by the poetic idea of overreaching and escape”) to witty (“Studying aeronautics because you are fascinated by flight is like becoming a gynaecologist because you like watching porn”).
Buried underneath the banter is an unspoken conviction that I was not good enough to continue. Let’s pause and consider the evidence: I graduated as the department topper. In graduate school, I had a perfect 4.0 GPA. Professors and mentors told me that I had the temperament for research. Yet, I found the idea of a career in research laughable. I would have done it if I were smarter, I believed. To have a meaningful career as a researcher in science or engineering one had to be a genius, but I thought I was only an aberration.
It was in graduate school in the US that I learnt of the impostor syndrome, a psychological pattern where one believes, in spite of evidence to the contrary, that one is a fraud, that one’s successes are sheer flukes. Impostor syndrome, huh, I remember thinking. Trust the Americans to come up with big names for the weight of bad decisions. Like the decision to pursue science or engineering when one is not cut out for it.
Back in college, I was an aberration: I was the only woman in my class of around 40. In my third year, I was working on a homework assignment with some of my classmates. At one point I got stuck and one of the men explained to me how to proceed. It was a perfectly normal interaction, but when I excused myself to use the bathroom, I came back to overhear this classmate sagely pronouncing that girls might get better grades, but they just don’t get the fundamentals of maths and science. All I heard was that I did not understand those fundamentals. It wasn’t the first such pronouncement. I had heard that girls do well in school only because they work harder, only because teachers favour them, only because boys aren’t serious about their futures yet. The real geniuses — like Einstein, like Edison — were, in a way, too cool for school. Yes, I did work hard. Yes, teachers liked me. But did I know everything, could I answer every question? No. Hence, not good enough. I never stopped to ask why a man could so easily extrapolate one woman’s wrong answer to a weakness of the whole gender, and why, just as easily, a woman could believe that she was the specific subject of every loose judgement on women (unless, of course, she declared that she was not like other girls.)
I am still learning to probe my self-doubt and shed the parts of it that are inherited. I am still learning to question my own biases. When I wanted to examine my professional experiences in my first novel, I instinctively wrote a male character. In Milk Teeth, it’s the male protagonist Kartik who is a brilliant student, who goes to an elite engineering college. It’s the man who grapples with the sting of unfulfilled genius. And it took two drafts for me to even question this choice, and the voice in my head said at once: “But it feels more universal this way. With a female character, this struggle will feel too specific, too narrow.”
The All India Survey on Higher Education 2017-18 estimates that 40% of the undergraduates in science and engineering are women, but women make up only 14% of scientists, engineers and technologists employed in research and development institutions. An absorbed fear that you are not good enough might look like the smallest of the obstacles women in STEM fields face – like sexism and discriminatory practices, an uneven distribution of childcare and chores at home, weaker peer networks, fewer female mentors and far fewer women in decision-making positions – but let’s not forget the young man who thinks women “just don’t get the fundamentals of maths and science”. Even if we don’t listen to him, as things stand today, he will be the professor, the manager, the supervisor of tomorrow.
Amrita Mahale is the author of the novel, Milk Teeth (Westland Context, 2018)
Source: Hindustan Times, 2/01/2019

South Asia is a dangerous place to be born

In 2018, one million newborn babies died before they reached one month of age. My wish for 2019 is that we will see many more South Asia babies getting the urgent attention and quality care that they need and deserve.

Right now, as you read this, babies that have just been born here in South Asia are battling for their lives. The lucky ones are in a special newborn care unit with doctors and nurses working hard to keep them alive – keeping them warm; giving them oxygen and antibiotics if they need them. For too many, the battle will be lost before their lives even properly begin.
South Asia is a dangerous place to be born. In 2018, one million newborn babies died before they reached one month of age. Every one of these deaths is a tragedy for the family. And the sheer number of deaths is an outrage. This number – one million newborn baby deaths – is 40% of all newborn deaths if we look around the globe. The risk of dying is the same for a South Asian newborn as it is for a baby in Sub-Saharan Africa.
The availability of clinics and hospitals is still an issue in some places, as is transport to get to them on time. But this is no longer the main problem. The key issue is how good, or how bad, the care for pregnant mothers and newborns is. When we know that every year, one million babies here in our region will be dead within the first month of being born, we have a strong indication that the quality of care is simply not good enough.
The good news that I can share is that mothers and families actually can do a lot themselves to counter the threat of poor care. They are far from powerless and they are crucial to improving this situation. They can start by looking critically at the care they get when a new baby is on its way. There are very visible signs of quality care to look for at their clinic or hospital. It starts with the fundamentals: Is the place clean? Look at the health care workers: are they able and willing to answer your questions? Are they washing their hands before they touch you and the baby? You don’t need a medical degree to look for these signs and they will be a good indicator of how well the mother, the birth and child will be handled.
What can you do if you do not feel comfortable with the quality? The answer is to speak up! Bring to the attention of the director of the clinic or hospital. Post your concerns about the quality on social media. Or talk to a journalist who might be able to write a story about it. Each one of us may have very little power, but together we are powerful. And if more mothers and families complain about the lack of appropriate care, we have better chances of improving the situation for the next newborn. You really do have a crucial part to play in creating change.
At home, mothers and families can also help ensure that a baby has the best chances of survival. Making sure that no girl becomes pregnant before she is 20 years old and her body can sustain a healthy pregnancy and is fully developed to give birth will help improve South Asia’s grave newborn death statistics. Families can help make sure that an expecting mother gets her first medical check within the first 12 weeks of pregnancy. That way, she can be given advice and problems can be detected before too long has passed. And, by choosing to breastfeed and to start breastfeeding right after the baby is born, the mother is giving her newborn the best chances to survive that first month when the new baby girl or boy is extremely vulnerable.
So, there is plenty that mothers and families can do to help protect their newborns. It is not all in the hands of doctors, nurses and birth attendants.
My wish for 2019 is that we will see many more South Asia babies getting the urgent attention and quality care that they need and deserve. Every child has the right to survive – and I wish for joy and happiness in every new family with a healthy and thriving newborn.
Jean Gough is regional director, Unicef for South Asia
Source: Hindustan Times, 2/01/2019

Overcome Setbacks


Life is not easy and simple; it is filled with many problems that can never be solved. Every single situation demands that we review all the options before we can come to any solution. We should not worry and become upset — we cannot solve problems permanently and forever. Sometimes we have partial solutions to the problems. But we should not forget that every solution brings new problems. This does not mean that we should not try partial solutions. Each of us has abilities but we have to develop them to overcome a problem. Abilities without effort are nothing. Many times in life, we put the cart before the horse. We do not put things in proper perspective and, therefore, we come to false conclusions. It is very difficult to know what the right way to solve our problems is. Sometimes we must confront them head on. Other times, we must be flexible, diplomatic and be willing to zigzag, and may be even backtrack a little, in order to solve them. We must overcome our obstacle in order to grow. One of the most difficult problems in life is how can we be reconciled with our enemies. In life, there will always be disputes, exchange of words, threats and blows. This happens within families, friends, within and between nations. Many a time, war is a product of these disputes. The major problems on earth are not the bomb or nuclear or chemical weapons. These are actually the products of the problem. The main problem is that the human imagination has not yet expanded to the point where it comprehends its own essential unity

Source: Economic Times, 2/01/2019

Tuesday, January 01, 2019

Dear Reader

Greetings


WISH YOU A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR 2019



TISS Guwahati Campus Library

Economic and Political Weekly: Table of Contents

Vol. 53, Issue No. 51, 29 Dec, 2018

Editorials

Comment

From 50 Years Ago

Strategic Affairs

Commentary

Book Reviews

Perspectives

Review of Rural Affairs

Current Statistics

Postscript

Letters

What is Kübler-Ross model in psychology


his refers to the five emotional stages that a person usually goes through during a period of grief. They are denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. However, not all people who experience grief go through all these stages. Some people may skip past some of the stages. The duration of each stage of grief may also vary from person to person depending on various reasons. The Kübler-Ross model was first proposed by Swiss psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross in her 1969 book On Death and Dying, based on her study of patients who were terminally ill.

Source: The Hindu, 1/1/2018

A full circle of rehabilitation


Trauma-informed care must be an integral part of the support provided to victims of trafficking 

It would be impossible to discuss the new Trafficking of Persons (Prevention, Protection and Rehabilitation) Bill 2018 without first getting involved in the criticism around it. This includes alleged discriminatory slants, the vesting of enormous power in newly formed investigating bodies, effectively restricting the personal liberties of survivors at some stages of the post-rescue process, and, more importantly, the Bill having been drafted “in secret” by a ministerial committee.

Multiple inputs

While the Bill is, and should be, open to constructive public argumentation, the charge of excessive discreetness is unfounded. Having served on a State-level committee as an analyst of international policy on human trafficking while the Bill was being drafted, in 2016, I made recommendations, as a mental health professional, to develop a bulwark of rehabilitation stratagems the Bill could incorporate and enhance the rehabilitation process for survivors. Others, lawyers, activists, doctors, social workers, came in with their ideas, experiences and opinions. After respectful dissent, we were able to draw up counsel for the Bill, which has been a subject of media debate since the first draft was released.
In my work in Kashmir with children who were victims of trauma induced by political violence, it was easy to find commonalities between their lives and of (trafficked) women whose stories I began to get familiar with after reading literature on commercial sex work. Both groups had been through grievous abuse and violence; both had experienced breach of consent, their rights to their bodies transgressed.

Defining trauma

We call it trauma. Mental health professionals have definitions for it. The one most common is: “Traumatic reactions are normal reactions to abnormal situations.” So survivors of trafficking who have been confined, beaten, raped need to receive care that is designed for their needs. Under existing custodial models of rehabilitation, all survivors stay at a shelter home for at least a short period (where there is real possibility of casual stigmatising, of shaming and bullying, and of the absence of a restorative and therapeutic environment conducive to trauma recovery), until they are repatriated. And at this time, their health-care needs should ideally be evaluated beyond the hurriedly conducted medical tests. Many survivors do see a counsellor, who usually begins a generic counselling treatment with the assumption that the survivor is depressed, or is clinically traumatised. At times, this might even result in short-term positive effects. When this observation is made, mental health caregivers, who are thinly spread across government-run schemes for thousands of survivors across the country, move on to the next woman in need.
This lack of compulsory formal assessment of the survivor’s mental health status along a continuum of care is deplorable, as is the current disregard for her personal narrative that puts her trauma in context. The survivor’s internal ways of responding to her trauma may never be articulated even if she is steadfast about attending her psychosocial counselling sessions, which is unusual for most women from marginalised communities; for them, life simply gets in the way of prioritising, let alone reaching out for mental health care. Likewise, her external stressors such as family pressures, and continuing physical, emotional and sexual exploitation may continue to operate on her without her learning strategies to cope at the psychosocial counselling sessions she takes pains to attend. This is ironical because good therapy work can only happen when counsellor and subject have sat down together and made a customised blueprint for the process of counselling in true democratic fashion. For a survivor of sex trafficking, trauma-informed care must be the touchstone for a caregiver.
Chandrani Dasgupta

Chandrani Dasgupta  

 
In brief, trauma-informed care is an approach to therapy that carries within it an awareness of the prevalence of trauma in the subject, and an understanding of the impact of that trauma on the physical, emotional, and mental health of that person. At the centre of trauma-informed care is the subjectivity of the survivor, her major life events and choices, and push and pull factors that governed these decisions. Counsellors skilled in this form of care know that traumatised people will respond in unpredictable and often unusual ways to what most people find perfectly ordinary, commonplace circumstances. They will not expect stereotypical reactions to atypical situations either.
Frustratingly, for a well-meaning and altruistic counsellor, it is not uncommon for a trauma victim to reject help. A planned move away from psychosocial models of counselling — treated as a panacea of sorts by mental health professionals working with trauma survivors — and toward trauma-informed or trauma-focussed counselling can yield rich dividends, although these forms of intervention take intensive training for the professional. The survivor might reclaim her human rights and learn to recognise her purpose in life. In the end, the survivor might feel rehabilitated.

Planning ahead

The new Bill makes provisions for mental health-care professionals to make long-term interventions to safeguard survivors’ health. It also makes provisions for a rehabilitation fund, which will receive annual budgetary allocations and collections from trafficking offence fines, to potentially arrange community-based rehabilitation initiatives for survivors. This gives hope that we might train more counsellors in trauma-focussed care, intervene often and early, and design grassroots activism campaigns to generate awareness of why adequate and accessible trauma informed care models chosen with the survivor’s consent can make a world of difference. We must supply the traumatised survivor with the implements to reclaim her life, and then rehabilitation will have come full circle.
Chandrani Dasgupta is a psychologist and independent researcher. She has worked extensively in the field of human trafficking and with children, and specialises in trauma care and resilience development
Source: The Hindu, 25/12/2018