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Puducherry Anganwadi Worker Toils 33 Years For Community Development. Wins Plan India Impact Awards
AstraZeneca and Plan India Create Awareness on Non-Communicable Diseases Among Lakhs of Children
Plan India Impact Awards 2022 honoured Last Mile Champions and Changemakers for their exceptional contributions toward community development
Plan India Impact Awards 2022 honoured Last Mile Champions and Changemakers for their exceptional contributions toward community development
Plan India Impact Awards 2022 honoured Last Mile Champions and Changemakers for their exceptional contributions toward community development
Plan India Impact Awards 2022 Honoured Last Mile Champions and Changemakers for Their Exceptional Contributions Toward Community Development
Plan India’s Young Girl Changemakers takeover influential leadership positions for advancing girls’ rights and gender equality
Publication: ThePrint
Publication Date: October 11, 2022
Link: https://theprint.in/ani-press-releases/plan-indias-young-girl-changemakers-takeover-influential-leadership-positions-for-advancing-girls-rights-and-gender-equality/1162955/
New Delhi [India], October 11 (ANI/BusinessWire India): Committed to strengthening the girls’ rights and gender equality space over the past decade, Plan India’s Girl Changemakers stepped into leadership roles across Diplomatic Missions, Corporates, and Government bodies on the International Day of the Girl. Through these symbolic takeovers, these highly driven gender champions will break gender stereotypes, encourage positive discourses, challenge discriminatory social norms, and mobilise people for a more gender-equitable society.
Girl Changemakers from ten Plan India’s intervention states, including Rajasthan, Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Odisha, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Delhi, showed strength and leadership and brought attention to the significance of girls having the right to decide on things that concern them. They showcased their potential as agents of change and engaged in meaningful and contributory dialogues to advance the cause of girls’ rights and equality.
Celebrating the 10th year of International Day of the Girl (IDG), Plan India released an anthem for girls on its social media channels. It aims to rally support and solidarity for an equal world where girls can aspire to become future leaders by highlighting #GirlsRiseHigh and mobilise key stakeholders’ support to ensure equal access to education, healthcare, and livelihood opportunities for them.
Mohammed Asif, Executive Director, Plan India, said, “Plan India has been supporting and nurturing the social spaces in which girls take centerstage, are listened to and valued as equals. We believe it is important for all girls to be confident and capable of addressing and overcoming the gender norms, expectations, and stereotypes that have hold them back from achieving their full potential in their family and community. In India, millions of girls are now empowered and moving forward to achieve their aspirations and ambitions. However, there are still many who need our support and enablement. The International Day of Girl 2022 is yet another occasion for all of us to join hands with the girls, who are keen to take action and improve their own lives and pursue their dreams and ambitions.”
“Plan India is honored to have had the opportunity to support more than 1,00,000 girls and young women to make their own decisions on education, health, and livelihoods. We will continue to encourage girls to lead the process of challenging gender stereotypes and improving their status. When girls and young women hold prominent positions in their professions, they can amplify their voices and inspire others to do better in life.”
Girl Changemaker, Parul from New Delhi, commented on the Takeover initiative, “International Day of the Girl is dedicated to all girls who have strived for and achieved their dreams. The takeover initiative not only gives us a chance to be heard and understood, but also provides us with opportunities to grow. Taking part in such initiatives will empower girls to be independent, confident and self-sufficient.”
In 2011, Plan led the global effort to build a coalition of support behind IDG, securing backing from the Canadian government which took this request to the United Nations. Over the years, Plan has worked with girls and multi-sectoral partners alike to launch global actions on girls’ rights. Thus, every year on IDG, girls from Plan India supported communities take over leadership roles in political, economic, corporate and social spaces, stepping into the shoes of influential leaders and experts, fulfilling their responsibilities, and demonstrating their power and potential to lead the way into the future.
#GirlRiseHigh
Girls Rise High is Plan India’s national campaign for girls’ and young women’s voice, power, and leadership. Girls are held back by gender inequalities, multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination, and systemic oppression that prevents them from being leaders in public life. Girls want to be part of the decisions that shape their lives. Girls know the challenges they face and the changes they need.
Valuing girls and young women as actors is critical for transforming communities and shaping gender-equal societies. National and community decision makers must support girls and young women to Rise High by making commitments to open, safe, inclusive pathways for them and their networks to have equal access to education, health, and livelihood opportunities.
This story is provided by BusinessWire India. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/BusinessWire India)
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Through the Young Health Program (YHP), Plan India and AstraZeneca are enabling and empowering young people to make healthy choices today for a better tomorrow.
Publication: The Good Sight
Publication Date: September 27, 2022
Link: https://thegoodsight.org/seeding-change-in-the-community/
Eleven-year-old Parveen is a petite, docile child at first glance till she speaks with fiery courage and confidence for one so young. Parveen, living in JJ Colony of Bawana in North Delhi, saw her grandfather and father addicted to alcohol in a community where this was more the norm than the exception. They were resistant to any change even though the grandfather had suffered three cardiac arrests. Little Parveen, upon associating with the Youth Health Program (YHP) with Plan India became aware of the dangers of alcohol addiction. Armed with this knowledge, she marched straight to her dadu, the patriarch, and convinced him of the dangers of alcohol to his health, the family finances, and the disruption of their normal life. And, with a little help, both the grandfather and father left alcohol. Where others had failed Parveen struck gold – changing the health and quality of life of her family for the better.
Parveen’s mother Sabina is proud of her daughter’s achievements and credits YHP for bringing this big change in their lives. Today, she is an active advocate of YHP and volunteers for campaigns and activities that bring change in her “street, community, and country” adding many others to this program.
The Program: Overview & Impact
YHP was started in Bawana, a large resettlement colony, inhabited by mostly daily wagers working in the factories of the Bawana Industrial area, in October 2021. It is a program that has been successfully conducted since 2010 by Plan India and AstraZeneca India in parts of Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, and Delhi. The program works by educating youth from the target communities themselves on the ill effects of tobacco and alcohol. Thus, the initiative undertakes a community-based approach to develop the youth into peer educators who in turn shoulder the responsibility of expanding the message to the entire community. In a span of 12 years in India, YHP, in its different phases, has so far positively impacted over 4,60,000 young people and more than 7,800 peer educators.
It is a successful model that has been implemented globally, too, and reached more than 8 million young people in more than 30 countries around the world to date, with 10 million more targeted between 2021 and 2025.
An HIC Facilitator interacts with the community members.
YHP aims to address the risk factors for non-communicable diseases (NCDs) like cancers, diabetes, heart, and respiratory ailments, tobacco and alcohol addiction, mental and physical ill health, unhealthy diet, and air pollution that are the leading cause of mortality. According to the World Health Organisation, 70% of these are preventable and linked back to risks encountered and behaviours started during adolescence. Thus, YHP aims to focus on enhancing responsive health-seeking behaviour among adolescents and other stakeholders so that they lead a happy and disease-free life. This will also reduce the growing burden of NCDs on the health system.
Due to the availability and accessibility of tobacco and alcohol, and different kinds of illegal drugs in this unauthorized colony, Bawana has a huge scope for awareness creation on risks associated with consumption of tobacco, alcohol, unhealthy diet and benefits of physical activity for young girls and boys so that they may take preventive action against NCD.
Safe Spaces: HICs
The program creates a Health Information Centre (HIC) that acts as a safe space for the children in the area. Across Delhi, Tamil Nadu, and Karnataka, 21 HICs are now operational. HIC is a hub of activities and sessions conducted by two facilitators (male and female each) or HICF, popularly addressed as ‘didi’ and ‘bhaiya’ by the children, for creating a web of awareness, empowering the stakeholders to take informed decisions, and bringing change in the community. Children associated with the program are so inspired that they become agents of change for themselves, their family, and their community. They conduct sessions and activities in turn, even deciding the schedule and topics, and are known as Peer Educators.
The key drivers of the program are community-based interventions like outreach by YHP staff, peer educators, and Health information centre (HIC) which is a platform where young people learn about risk associated with NCD and take informed decisions about their health.
Peer Power
Meet Afreen. A fifteen-year-old girl, who first changed herself with the awareness gained from the sessions and then others. Afreen used to consume junk food easily available from roadside vendors like chowmein every day after school. Afreen says, “I used to feel very tired and sick all the time and my mother used to take me to the doctor quite often. But after the sessions, I learned that this has a bad effect on our health so I stopped eating chowmein. I started doing yoga that didi, bhaiya taught us, and now I eat ‘Tiranga food’. I feel much healthier and don’t get sick now.” She spreads awareness about Tiranga food that includes vegetables (greens), lentils (orange), and whites (rice etc.) and counsels children not to fall prey to unhealthy food. This is just one of the topics that she talks about as she proudly displays the posters that she and her peers made as awareness-generating tools.
The story of Renu is no different. Renu, a class 11th student, too turned from unhygienically prepared roadside junk food to “Tiranga food”. She also gave up video games that she spent all her time on. In a place where space, especially a ‘safe space’ is at a premium, she stepped into a nearby park along with others her age to play football, perhaps enjoying the freedom of running freely for the first time in her youthful life. She enjoys the healthy camaraderie with her peers, no longer missing the world of video games, and even played football in a friendly match on International Youth Day.
This healthy camaraderie amongst boys and girls and respect for women has been inculcated by the program. One such case in point is seventeen-year-old Sachin who brought conversations about menstruation in the open, understood his sister’s pain, and supported her in her activities at home, often raising his voice against associated social taboos.
YHP has also supported the government machinery of Anganwadi workers and Asha workers providing them with sanitary napkins for distribution and holding sessions for awareness about menstruation in their areas. The lack of knowledge about menstrual hygiene and access to hygienic menstrual products leads to infections amongst women which the program is trying to overcome.
Sachin also talks about substance abuse and alcohol addiction endemic in the area and how as an inspired peer educator he has brought about change. Children his age often like to make reels for social media for ‘tashan’ (style) where they are smoking a hukkah, falling prey to the falsely perpetuated ideas of masculinity. Sachin helped rescue as many as five children from the trap of substance abuse by counseling them and engaging them in activities at the HIC. The Aanganwadi workers also validate the large substance abuse amongst adolescent children in the area like bhang, hukkah, whitener ink, nasha, and alcohol among others. The HICF facilitate intergenerational dialogues between parents and children, bringing taboo subjects like addiction and menstruation into the open and getting family support for children to overcome their challenges.
Addiction often begins at home when parents give money to children to bring tambaku. Recognizing this, volunteers made posters at the HIC in the local language that “baccho ko nasheele cheeze bechana kanooni apradh hai”. As a result, the shopkeepers stopped selling such substances to children. Nukkad natak (street theatre) and campaigns are often held by adolescents and other adult volunteers like Parveen to bring awareness to the larger community.
YHP is thus sowing the seeds of social and behaviour change amongst adolescents and other stakeholders to enhance responsive health-seeking behaviour and enable them to lead a happy and disease-free life. Change is being wrought by empowering young people, mobilizing the community, creating an enabling environment for caregivers, and encouraging advocacy for the changing environment.
Plan India Impact Awards 2022 honoured Last Mile Champions and Changemakers for their exceptional contributions toward community development
Publication: The Print
Publication Date: July 23, 2022
Link: https://theprint.in/ani-press-releases/plan-india-impact-awards-2022-honoured-last-mile-champions-and-changemakers-for-their-exceptional-contributions-toward-community-development/1052077/
New Delhi [India]: Plan India, a not-for-profit organisation striving to advance children’s rights and equality for girls, today announced the winners of the 5th Edition of Plan India Impact Awards 2022 to honour the last-mile champions including frontline workers, youth leaders and changemakers for their outstanding efforts in ensuring the development and delivery of basic services for children, adolescents, women and men across all districts in our country.
Building on the success of the previous four editions, the Awards have bolstered sustainable development by recognising the efforts of incredible last-mile champions and inspired several others to follow the suit and build resilient communities. As part of Plan India’s rigorous selection process, nominations are assessed and shortlisted at three levels: first by a third-party expert agency, then by a panel of sectoral experts, followed by the final selection of winners by the National Jury which is composed of eminent personalities with extensive sectoral experience from the government, corporate sector, and development sector.
Among the eight categories, C. Ambiga, from Puducherry was awarded for her contribution as the best Anganwadi Worker; Rebati Sahoo from Odisha won in the ASHA/ANM worker category; Chid Welfare Committee (Lucknow), Ravinder Singh Jadon was declared winner in the best Child Welfare Committee category; Rajni Kant Singh from Bihar was felicitated as the Best Community Volunteer (including COVID Warrior), and Panitar Pally Unnayan Samiti from West Bengal was recognized as the best Women Self-Help Group. Palak Agarwal and Lalit Kumar Dogra took the limelight as the best Young Changemakers in the female and male categories respectively. For the Special Award category- Last mile champions for girls’ rights, Deepa Pawar from Maharashtra was recognised as the winner.
This year, Plan India also launched a Special Award for the Best Digital Champion for Girls’ Rights to recognize and felicitate girls and young women who leverage the power of social media to advance girls’ rights and women’s empowerment. Under the Special Award, Virali Modi was announced as the Golden Wings winner and Kalki Subramaniam bagged the Silver Wings winner title.
Plan India Impact Awards
The Plan India Impact Awards were envisioned to recognise the last-mile champions, motivate them to continue their life-changing work, and reinforce and replicate their best practices for enhanced programme delivery and sustainable development across the country. Instituted in 2017, Plan India Impact Awards are now an annual recognition of the positive contribution of frontline workers, changemakers, and community volunteers.
Over the course of four editions, we have received more than 2000 noteworthy nominations. This year, we received over 580 remarkable applications from selfless changemakers at the forefront of driving social change.