The women and child development ministry, with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, has distributed smartphones at 62,000 anganwadi centres in six states from June this year to track services offered there and to make nutrition-related interventions.
"We have given over 50,000 cellphones to anganwadi workers through which they give us daily reports on how many children were provided food, how many were weighed, etc.," Women and Child Development Minister Maneka Gandhi said.
If there is a child who is underweight, a notice goes to the parents, an anganwadi supervisor and a Child Development Project Officer (CDPO), she said.
These children are among the total 39 lakh under the age of six years covered so far in 47 districts of Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and Rajasthan.
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The programme also includes three lakh pregnant women and lactating mothers as beneficiaries.
"The smartphones help us to check pilferage in the distribution of take-home ration and also charts the growth of the child automatically on a graph on the basis of weight and height measured by a worker," WCD Secretary R K Shrivastava explained.
While distributing a packet of take-home ration, the worker scans the barcode on it and adds that information to the profile of the beneficiary maintained on the common application software.
The growth chart plotted by the software provides daily progress of the child.
"We will have daily figures of stunting, under-nutrition, over-nutrition instead of decadal information provided by the health ministry," the senior official added.
An SMS is automatically sent to the parents everytime a child shows up as underweight.
The government is now planning to cover 1,50,000 anganwadis across 77 districts in eight states by the end of this year.
These smartphones also help prevent fudging while entering data and will replace nearly 11 registers an anganwadi has to maintain on a daily basis.
Anganwadi centres are a part of the government's Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS) and provide a package of six services -- supplementary nutrition, referral services, immunisation, health check-up, pre-school non-formal education and health and nutrition education.
There are 13.55 lakh anganwadis across the country and 10 crore beneficiaries, who include children under the age of six years and pregnant women and lactating mothers.