Mental health awareness through education is crucial for rural spaces
Mental health awareness through education is crucial for rural spaces
In remote and rural areas, the penetration of mental health awareness is lesser than in cities. In these places, it is education that holds the key.
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UPDATED: April 4, 2021 18:29 IST
In remote and rural areas, the penetration of mental health awareness is lesser than in cities. In these places, it is education which holds the key.
HIGHLIGHTS 197.3 million people in India had mental disorders in 2017, of which 45.7 million people had depressive disorders
20 per cent of the country’s population suffers from some sort of mental health problem
India
Kerala
Mental-health-survey
Lancet-psychiatry
Mental-health
Mental-health-awareness
Rural
Education
இந்தியா
கேரள
மன-ஆரோக்கியம்-கணக்கெடுப்பு
Afghanistan: Humanitarian Response Plan 2018-2021 (2020 Year End Monitoring Report)
Format
Summary
Humanitarian needs driven and exacerbated by conflict, natural disasters and the multi-dimensional impact of the COVID-19 pandemic continue to affect millions of people in Afghanistan at the end of 2020. The emergence of COVID-19 in Afghanistan resulted in a near-doubling of humanitarian need in the space of 12 months up from 9.4 million in January 2020 to 14 million in June 2020 to 18.4 million in January 2021.
In 2020, $564.5 million (50 per cent of requirements) was received from donors towards a well-coordinated response, in addition to the $96m in late funding carried over from 2019. Humanitarians used this funding to reach 11.75 million people with life-saving assistance across the country throughout the year. Despite the challenging conditions, humanitarian partners were able to exceed the planned reach outlined in the mid-year revision. This is largely due to a significant
Afghanistan
Parwan
Parvan
Doha
Ad-daw-ah
Qatar
Iran
Kabul
Kabol
Pakistan
Afghan
Recently,
Campaign India revealed the survey findings of its first-ever Mental Health Survey, conducted by respondents from advertising, marketing, PR and the media industries. Seeing participation from close to 200 respondents, the findings threw light on a whole host of workplace challenges faced by employees, compounded further by the Covid-19 pandemic and the year 2020 was. To take the conversation further, and to address the issues brought to the fore by the survey,
Campaign India put together a panel comprising senior and mid-level members from the advertising, marketing and PR universe. The session saw Achint Setia, VP - marketing at Myntra; Surbhi Gupta, chief talent officer, Publicis Groupe, South Asia; Jaideep Shergill, founding partner, Pitchfork Partners, and Saransh Mehta, brand strategist, Dentsu Webchutney. The session was moderated by Mukta Lad, consultant journalist at Campaign India.
India
Dentsu-webchutney
Jaideep-shergill
Achint-setia
Saransh-mehta
Surbhi-gupta
Mental-health
Facebook
Campaign-india
Mental-health-survey
Publicis-groupe
South-asia
Recently,
Campaign India introduced its Mental Health Survey, taken by close to 200 respondents in 15 days. The survey revealed insights that offer a glimpse into the mental health of professionals in the advertising, media, PR and marketing industries. 2020 was an extraordinary year. Thanks to the Covid-19 pandemic, people were forced to distance themselves physically from loved ones and were unable to step out for any activities that brought them joy – watching movies in a cinema hall, stepping out to their favourite restaurants, and going on vacations, to name a few. Most importantly, however, working professionals had to adapt to a life of working from home, almost overnight. This new arrangement had several positives but has also contributed towards blurring lines between personal and professional lives.
India
Dentsu-webchutney
Jaideep-shergill
Achint-setia
Saransh-mehta
Surbhi-gupta
Mental-health
Campaign-india
Mental-health-survey
Publicis-groupe-south-asia
Pitchfork-partners
Mukta-lad
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