Introduction

The Beti Bachao Beti Padho (BBBP) scheme was launched by the Government of India on 22nd January 2015 at Panipat, Haryana. It is a tri-ministerial, flagship initiative involving the Ministry of Women and Child Development (MWCD), the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW), and the Ministry of Education (formerly Ministry of Human Resource Development). The scheme was initially launched in 100 districts with a low Child Sex Ratio (CSR) and was expanded to all 640 districts (as per Census 2011) in 2018.

Rationale And Objectives

The primary driver for the BBBP initiative was the persistent decline in the Child Sex Ratio (CSR), defined as the number of girls per 1000 boys in the 0–6 year age group. The CSR dropped from 945 in 1991 to 927 in 2001, and further to 918 in 2011.

Core Objectives

  • Prevention of gender-biased sex-selective elimination (female foeticide).
  • Ensuring the survival and protection of the girl child.
  • Ensuring the education and participation of the girl child.

Key Strategies

  • Implement a sustained social mobilization and communication campaign to create equal value for the girl child and promote her education.
  • Place the issue of decline in CSR/SRB (Sex Ratio at Birth) in public discourse, with improvement measured through specific indicators.
  • Focus on Gender Critical Districts and Cities low on CSR for intensive and integrated action.
  • Mobilize and empower community groups, including Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs), local bodies, and grassroots workers (ASHA/AWW), as “Agents of Change.”

Multi-Sectoral Interventions

1. Health Sector Interventions (MoHFW)

  • Enforcement of PC&PNDT Act: Strict implementation of the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques Act, 1994, to regulate and prevent the misuse of technology for sex determination.
  • Universal Registration: Ensuring 100% registration of births and deaths.
  • Antenatal Care (ANC): Strengthening the registration of pregnancies in the first trimester and promoting institutional deliveries.
  • Newborn Care: Ensuring the survival of the girl child through the establishment of Newborn Care Corners (NBCC) and Special Newborn Care Units (SNCU).

2. Education Sector Interventions (Ministry of Education)

  • Enrollment Drives: Implementation of “Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan” to ensure universal enrollment of girls in schools.
  • Retention Strategies: Providing incentives, textbooks, and uniforms to prevent drop-outs.
  • Safety and Infrastructure: Constructing separate, functional toilets for girls in all schools to improve retention, particularly for adolescent girls.
  • Gender-Sensitive Curriculum: Promoting a bias-free learning environment.

3. Social Protection And Advocacy (MWCD)

  • Community Mobilization: Celebrating the birth of the girl child (e.g., “Guddi-Gudda Boards” displaying birth statistics in villages).
  • Capacity Building: Training local government officials and frontline workers on gender sensitivity and child rights.
  • Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (SSY): A small deposit scheme for the girl child launched as part of BBBP to ensure her financial security for higher education and marriage.

Role Of The Pediatrician

As frontline advocates for child health, pediatricians play a critical role in the BBBP framework:

  • Advocacy: Counseling parents against gender discrimination and promoting the value of the girl child during routine clinical visits.
  • Ethical Practice: Adhering strictly to the PC&PNDT Act and reporting non-compliance.
  • Health and Nutrition: Ensuring the girl child receives equal access to immunization, breastfeeding support, and nutritional interventions.
  • Identification of Neglect: Monitoring for gender-biased neglect (e.g., delayed healthcare seeking for sick girls or malnutrition specifically in female siblings).

Monitoring And Success Indicators

The success of the BBBP scheme is monitored through a centralized MIS (Management Information System) and district-level dashboards. Key indicators include:

  • Sex Ratio at Birth (SRB): Improvement in the number of female births registered.
  • ANC Registration: Percentage of first-trimester registrations.
  • Institutional Deliveries: Percentage of female births occurring in facilities.
  • Secondary School Enrollment: Percentage of girls transitioning from primary to secondary education.

Recent Expansion (BBBP 2.0)

The revamped BBBP guidelines (2022) under “Mission Shakti” include additional components:

  • Mandatory 1% annual increase in the enrollment of girls in secondary education and skilling in non-traditional vocations.
  • Emphasis on menstrual hygiene management through the provision of sanitary napkin vending machines.
  • Strengthening of “One Stop Centres” for the protection of girls from violence.