On October 15, the 2020 “Loving Yuesao” Women Economic
Empowerment Program Annual Review and Program Upgrade Conference was held in
Beijing, jointly organized by China Foundation for Poverty Alleviation and
Royal FrieslandCampina.
▲Dancing show “Priceless Sister” performed by energetic “Yuesao”
(Program Participants) .
Yuesao (月嫂)in Chinese refers to women hired to take care of a newborn baby
and its mother in the month after childbirth. In 2016, China Foundation for
Poverty Alleviation and Royal FrieslandCampina initiated “Loving Yuesao [aixin
yuesao–爱心月嫂]” Women Economic Empowerment Program, dedicated
to helping women from underserved communities in rural areas master skills in
domestic service and infant care to get rid of poverty and gain respect. The
program provides free training and employment opportunities in Beijing, and beneficiaries
of the program are expected to be qualified for infant care and domestic
services so as to get accessed to relevant job posts in cities after being
trained. The program also creates a career development platform for
beneficiaries by providing continuous employment services including
consultation, career fair, sharing session and setting up incentive fund to
support participants to start their own domestic service business after gaining
skills and working experience from the program.
▲The “Yuesao” trainees are practicing bathing a baby.
Since its launch in 2016, the program has trained more than
1,220 women from impoverished areas to become professional domestic service and
infant care workers, and has achieved 100% placement in jobs, increasing their
monthly income to about three times the previous level, significantly improving
the lives and social status of the women beneficiaries, while alleviating the
pressure of mothers in urban areas. With the continuous development of the
project, China Foundation for Poverty Alleviation and Royal FrieslandCampina
attach great importance to the accumulation of experience, quick insight into
the needs of society, and constant innovation and upgrading of the project in
line with the trend, to continuously empower the women from underserved
communities with professionalism and expertise.
▲The project is entering its fifth year.
Role changes, psychological disparities, and a diminished
sense of worth make many new mothers fall into postpartum depression before
they can adapt. According to the "Chinese Mothers' Anxiety Index"
report, there are more than 10 million new mothers in China every year, of
which 60% to 80% have psychological problems of varying degrees, and nearly 20%
will develop clinical depression. In addition, Chinese mothers also suffer from
anxiety, with children's health, education and marital relationships ranking
among the top three sources of anxiety for mothers. Mothers are under
tremendous psychological pressure due to work pressure, family relationships
and role changes, and this has become a major issue that needs to be addressed.
▲Program upgrades to call attention to postpartum psychological
care
In response to the escalating market demand, “Loving Yuesao” program has
evolved with the times. Collaborated with Fudan University and Shanghai Red
House Hospital, the program developed its training curriculum by adding new
courses for the incoming trainees in the area of postpartum psychological care,
calling for attention and social support to postpartum depression and other psychological
problems among the brand-new mothers and their families.
For the optimization and upgrading of the fifth phase of “Loving
Yuesao” program, Fang Zhao, professor at the School of Social Development and
Public Policy at Fudan University, pointed out: "From the perspective of
family life cycle, the birth of a baby is a new journey for the family, which
fills every family with the joy of a new life, but it also makes family members
face many changes in roles and bear the corresponding pressure. A
professionally trained yuesao can play a positive role in this special moment
of family life cycle transition. Not only does it alleviate the pressure of family
caregiving, it can also partly play a role in companionship, support and
psychological relief, easing the mother's anxiety."