Compassion for the caregivers : an Indian perspective on the burnout of caregivers in child care institutions

India has over 23.6 million orphaned and abandoned children (OAC), many residing in child care institutions (CCIs). These children depend on caregivers, who often come from resource limited backgrounds, impacting their ability to meet the children’s emotional, physical, and intellectual needs. A 201...

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Main Authors: Akansha Arora, Gurneet Kalra, Kiran Modi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CELCIS 2025-05-01
Series:Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
Subjects:
Online Access:https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/92780/
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author Akansha Arora
Gurneet Kalra
Kiran Modi
author_facet Akansha Arora
Gurneet Kalra
Kiran Modi
author_sort Akansha Arora
collection DOAJ
description India has over 23.6 million orphaned and abandoned children (OAC), many residing in child care institutions (CCIs). These children depend on caregivers, who often come from resource limited backgrounds, impacting their ability to meet the children’s emotional, physical, and intellectual needs. A 2018 study by the Ministry of Women and Child Development highlighted a 5% caregiver deficit, with 15% of CCIs exceeding capacity, raising concerns about the quality of care and supervision provided. Caregivers face significant challenges, including mental health issues stemming from the demands of their role. This study focuses on a capability-building initiative by Udayan Care and Duke University to address these challenges. Capability building emphasises enhancing caregivers’ attitudes, knowledge, and skills to better support traumatised children while managing their own wellbeing. Using a quasiexperimental research design, the study evaluates the impact of systemic interventions on caregivers' ability to provide holistic care for OAC. The findings underline the importance of empowering caregivers through training and resources to improve child welfare outcomes in CCIs. This research has significant implications for child welfare practices and policies, both in India and globally.
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spelling doaj-art-aca02ec1b43241d48f2dac9b53c858962025-08-20T02:26:23ZengCELCISScottish Journal of Residential Child Care2976-93532025-05-01241547510.17868/strath.00092780Compassion for the caregivers : an Indian perspective on the burnout of caregivers in child care institutionsAkansha AroraGurneet KalraKiran ModiIndia has over 23.6 million orphaned and abandoned children (OAC), many residing in child care institutions (CCIs). These children depend on caregivers, who often come from resource limited backgrounds, impacting their ability to meet the children’s emotional, physical, and intellectual needs. A 2018 study by the Ministry of Women and Child Development highlighted a 5% caregiver deficit, with 15% of CCIs exceeding capacity, raising concerns about the quality of care and supervision provided. Caregivers face significant challenges, including mental health issues stemming from the demands of their role. This study focuses on a capability-building initiative by Udayan Care and Duke University to address these challenges. Capability building emphasises enhancing caregivers’ attitudes, knowledge, and skills to better support traumatised children while managing their own wellbeing. Using a quasiexperimental research design, the study evaluates the impact of systemic interventions on caregivers' ability to provide holistic care for OAC. The findings underline the importance of empowering caregivers through training and resources to improve child welfare outcomes in CCIs. This research has significant implications for child welfare practices and policies, both in India and globally.https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/92780/child welfareabandoned childrenorphaned childrenchild care institutions
spellingShingle Akansha Arora
Gurneet Kalra
Kiran Modi
Compassion for the caregivers : an Indian perspective on the burnout of caregivers in child care institutions
Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
child welfare
abandoned children
orphaned children
child care institutions
title Compassion for the caregivers : an Indian perspective on the burnout of caregivers in child care institutions
title_full Compassion for the caregivers : an Indian perspective on the burnout of caregivers in child care institutions
title_fullStr Compassion for the caregivers : an Indian perspective on the burnout of caregivers in child care institutions
title_full_unstemmed Compassion for the caregivers : an Indian perspective on the burnout of caregivers in child care institutions
title_short Compassion for the caregivers : an Indian perspective on the burnout of caregivers in child care institutions
title_sort compassion for the caregivers an indian perspective on the burnout of caregivers in child care institutions
topic child welfare
abandoned children
orphaned children
child care institutions
url https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/92780/
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AT gurneetkalra compassionforthecaregiversanindianperspectiveontheburnoutofcaregiversinchildcareinstitutions
AT kiranmodi compassionforthecaregiversanindianperspectiveontheburnoutofcaregiversinchildcareinstitutions