Every morning for the past 16 years, save on the weekends, Sukara Sinha has walked for two hours from her home in Palnar village of rural Dantewada in Chhattisgarh’s militarised Bastar district to reach her office in the remote Tikanpal gram panchayat. Here, she meets with her team of Anganwadi workers and discusses health statistics and medicine requirements. About a dozen women sit at the two room centre located at the mouth of the village. They count the medicine and vaccination stocks and list the ones that need restocking. Dystentry medicine, cough syrups, fever medicines and contraceptive pills are heavily in demand along with iron and haemoglobin supplements for women and children. “Maintaining inventory is boring but essential as it takes a while for medicines to reach us,” she states.