Dasra Philanthropy Week 2018 Opens, Focuses on India’s 250 Million Adolescents
Panel of Experts, Govt. Officials, and Philanthropists Meet To Discuss Road Ahead
Panel of Experts, Govt. Officials, and Philanthropists Meet To Discuss Road Ahead

New Delhi, February 20, 2018: The Dasra Philanthropy Week 2018, India's leading annual philanthropy event, opened today in New Delhi with a convening of government officials, non-profits, foundations, and philanthropists discussing the need for urgent and formal collaboration to address India’s development challenges related to adolescents, sanitation and governance.
Dr. Ajay Khera, Deputy Commissioner, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, and Xerses Sidhwa, Director of Health, India, at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) set the tone for the day by highlighting planned activities, successes achieved and challenges to be overcome for adolescents, sanitation and governance.
Speaking at the forum while launching the ‘Adolescent Poll’, Dr. Ajay Khera, Deputy Commissioner, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare said: "Adolescent poll may help in understanding the fast changing health and social needs of adolescents for midcourse corrections.”
The Adolescent Poll has been jointly developed by the Ministry of Health, Dasra and USAID under the “10to19: Dasra Adolescent Collaborative,” launched last year in March, to review the implementation and reach of the Ministry of Health’s national adolescent health program called Rashtriya Kishor Swasthya Karyakram. This poll will cover adolescents in seven states — Assam, Haryana, Jharkhand, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, and Uttarakhand. The poll findings will be announced by mid-2018 and will enable the health ministry to better understand the successes and challenges of the national program.
Highlighting the role of the “10to19 Collaborative,” Xerses Sidhwa, Director, Health, USAID/India, said: ‘10to19’ is India’s first outcome-led collaborative that aims to reach five million adolescents by 2022 and supports the goals of Rashtriya Kishore Swasthya Karyakram, which is an important and a landmark step forward in promising health, opportunities and brighter prospects for India’s 250 million adolescents. India has the world’s largest youth population, and if we are to have any impact on improving health and well-being in India, we need to focus on adolescents.”
Shailja Mehta, Associate Director, Dasra, said: “The complexity and scale of challenges faced by India’s 120 million adolescents girls is one that absolutely needs collective action. Collaboration is at the core of achieving long-term, large-scale and sustainable change to offset these challenges. However, bringing about such collaboration is no easy task, and agreeing to work together is no guarantee of success. Dasra’s experience in building Dasra Girl Alliance and the 10to19: Dasra Adolescents Collaborative has given us a lot of valuable learnings on what it takes to partner successfully to ensure outcomes.”
A new campaign called “Ab Meri Baari” that focuses on transforming girls from being seen as a burden into leaders was also launched. Watch the campaign video here: https://youtu.be/Lg5ty5_Q5hE
The campaign launch was followed by various panel discussions that highlighted partnerships with government. A network of 60 NGOs that worked on adolescent health also came together to share their insights. The panel discussions were attended by Ruchi Yadav (The Hunger Project), Pushpa Devi (Gram Panchayat member), Bhawna Prakash (EY), Anju Dwivedi (Centre for Policy Research), Dr. Sharmila Neogi (USAID) and Dr. Zoya Rizvi (Ministry of Health and Family Welfare).
Size of challenges and possibilities for India’s adolescents
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Notes to the Editor:
About USAID
The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) works to end extreme poverty and promote resilient, democratic societies. USAID is an independent government agency that provides economic, development, and humanitarian assistance around the world in support of the foreign policy goals of the United States. Leveraging India’s growing financial and human resources, USAID is harnessing the strengths and capabilities of both countries to tackle development challenges not only in India, but worldwide. In all sectors of its activities, USAID builds private sector partnerships to foster in-country sustainability and ownership, with a focus on issues such as health, urban water and sanitation, food security, climate change, early grade reading, and women’s empowerment.
About Dasra
Dasra, meaning enlightened giving in Sanskrit, is a pioneering strategic philanthropic organization that aims to transform India to a place where more than a billion thrive with dignity and equity. Since its inception in 1999, Dasra has accelerated social change by driving collaborative action through powerful partnerships among a trust-based network of stakeholders (corporations, foundations, families, non-profits, socially responsible businesses, government and media). Over the years, Dasra has deepened social impact in focused fields that include adolescents, urban sanitation and governance, and it has built social capital by leading a strategic philanthropy movement in the country.
For more information, visit www.dasra.org. Follow #DPW2018 for live updates on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.
Dr. Ajay Khera, Deputy Commissioner, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, and Xerses Sidhwa, Director of Health, India, at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) set the tone for the day by highlighting planned activities, successes achieved and challenges to be overcome for adolescents, sanitation and governance.
Speaking at the forum while launching the ‘Adolescent Poll’, Dr. Ajay Khera, Deputy Commissioner, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare said: "Adolescent poll may help in understanding the fast changing health and social needs of adolescents for midcourse corrections.”
The Adolescent Poll has been jointly developed by the Ministry of Health, Dasra and USAID under the “10to19: Dasra Adolescent Collaborative,” launched last year in March, to review the implementation and reach of the Ministry of Health’s national adolescent health program called Rashtriya Kishor Swasthya Karyakram. This poll will cover adolescents in seven states — Assam, Haryana, Jharkhand, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, and Uttarakhand. The poll findings will be announced by mid-2018 and will enable the health ministry to better understand the successes and challenges of the national program.
Highlighting the role of the “10to19 Collaborative,” Xerses Sidhwa, Director, Health, USAID/India, said: ‘10to19’ is India’s first outcome-led collaborative that aims to reach five million adolescents by 2022 and supports the goals of Rashtriya Kishore Swasthya Karyakram, which is an important and a landmark step forward in promising health, opportunities and brighter prospects for India’s 250 million adolescents. India has the world’s largest youth population, and if we are to have any impact on improving health and well-being in India, we need to focus on adolescents.”
Shailja Mehta, Associate Director, Dasra, said: “The complexity and scale of challenges faced by India’s 120 million adolescents girls is one that absolutely needs collective action. Collaboration is at the core of achieving long-term, large-scale and sustainable change to offset these challenges. However, bringing about such collaboration is no easy task, and agreeing to work together is no guarantee of success. Dasra’s experience in building Dasra Girl Alliance and the 10to19: Dasra Adolescents Collaborative has given us a lot of valuable learnings on what it takes to partner successfully to ensure outcomes.”
A new campaign called “Ab Meri Baari” that focuses on transforming girls from being seen as a burden into leaders was also launched. Watch the campaign video here: https://youtu.be/Lg5ty5_Q5hE
The campaign launch was followed by various panel discussions that highlighted partnerships with government. A network of 60 NGOs that worked on adolescent health also came together to share their insights. The panel discussions were attended by Ruchi Yadav (The Hunger Project), Pushpa Devi (Gram Panchayat member), Bhawna Prakash (EY), Anju Dwivedi (Centre for Policy Research), Dr. Sharmila Neogi (USAID) and Dr. Zoya Rizvi (Ministry of Health and Family Welfare).
Size of challenges and possibilities for India’s adolescents
- Accounting for one-fifth of total Indian population, there are 250 million adolescents; 120 million of whom are adolescent girls
- India ranks number 1 in adolescent pregnancies worldwide; although delaying adolescent pregnancy could add 12% to India’s GDP or USD 400 billion
- Only 47% of girls are enrolled in secondary school; each additional year of schooling for girls reduces infant mortality for their offspring by up to 10%
- Workforce participation rate for Indian women is at 29%, which is far less than that of comparable economies such as China (70%), the US (66%), or Brazil (65%); for every USD 1 invested on key interventions for RMNCH, about USD 20 in benefits could be generated
____________________________________________________________________________
Notes to the Editor:
About USAID
The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) works to end extreme poverty and promote resilient, democratic societies. USAID is an independent government agency that provides economic, development, and humanitarian assistance around the world in support of the foreign policy goals of the United States. Leveraging India’s growing financial and human resources, USAID is harnessing the strengths and capabilities of both countries to tackle development challenges not only in India, but worldwide. In all sectors of its activities, USAID builds private sector partnerships to foster in-country sustainability and ownership, with a focus on issues such as health, urban water and sanitation, food security, climate change, early grade reading, and women’s empowerment.
About Dasra
Dasra, meaning enlightened giving in Sanskrit, is a pioneering strategic philanthropic organization that aims to transform India to a place where more than a billion thrive with dignity and equity. Since its inception in 1999, Dasra has accelerated social change by driving collaborative action through powerful partnerships among a trust-based network of stakeholders (corporations, foundations, families, non-profits, socially responsible businesses, government and media). Over the years, Dasra has deepened social impact in focused fields that include adolescents, urban sanitation and governance, and it has built social capital by leading a strategic philanthropy movement in the country.
For more information, visit www.dasra.org. Follow #DPW2018 for live updates on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.