More help awaits left-behind children
Yang Rezuo (left), a child welfare official from Liangshan Yi autonomous prefecture in Sichuan province, plays with an 11-year-old girl. Provided to China Daily |
China trains social workers to meet demands of welfare expansion in nearly 50 cities
"My mom left us when I was 1 year old," said 8-year-old Panpan, who lives in Xiwen county in Shanxi province. Her mother left her and their village to work in a city. Her father did so too, soon after her mother's departure.
Panpan has been raised by her grandfather since. He supports the family through farming and makes some 200 yuan ($32) a month.
In China, one child out of every four children lives apart from biological parents owing to internal migrations that are often driven by economic reasons, according to the All China Women Federation, a government agency.
A recent study by the federation showed that China has around 61.02 million left-behind children, who make up for 21.22 percent of its overall child population of 287 million.
In a bid to help such children and their care-givers, who are usually grandparents, the government has stepped up funding and training of grassroots activists known as "barefoot" social workers, by expanding an existing child welfare program.
Years ago, Chinese people used "barefoot doctor" as a description for medical practitioners in villages, who provided basic services.
The "barefoot" social workers are a result of an initiative by the United Nations International Children Emergency Fund in 2010 to extend social services to vulnerable children in China.
The Ministry of Civil Affairs and the UN agency began a pilot project in 120 villages across Henan, Sichuan, Shanxi and Yunnan provinces and Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region that year to help children effected by HIV/AIDS. The program then expanded to left-behind children and orphans in those areas.