Monday, June 11, 2012

shield foundation in hindustan times

The year truly began on a good note for Shield. After becoming an investee of UnLtd India, we have now been featured in the Hindustan Times, Mumbai edition, page 4.

The news was carried on January 2nd, 2012. Click on the image to read the report. For more recent coverage in the news, see this post.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

we are now on facebook and picasa

In an effort to increase our visibility and make Shield Foundation more accessible online, we now have a facebook page and a Picasa Gallery. Short updates and a few photos of our activities will be posted on the facebook page. You can view complete web albums at the Picasa Gallery.

Both these platforms are for public viewing. That means you do not need a facebook or Picasa account to view these pages. In case you have trouble finding these links in the future, you can see them on the left sidebar of this blog, under the Important Links section.

Click on the links to visit the respective pages. If you have trouble viewing the links, copy and paste our facebook page link in your broswer: facebook.com/ShieldFoundationIndia To view the Picasa Gallery, paste this this address in your browser: picasaweb.google.com/107364788581843409343

Saturday, June 9, 2012

spark the rise project: support it!

Mahindra recently launched a campaign called Spark the Rise. It is a platform for launching projects and hopefully getting resources mobilised for those projects. It takes the idea of crowdsourcing to the realm of social entrepreneurship.

Swati Ingole, who is a founder of Shield Foundation, has a project on Spark the Rise. It is a Multi Service Centre for senior citizens in Dharavi. It is envisioned as a single go-to centre for medical, legal, educational, nutritional, recreational needs of the senior citizens. It will also serve as an information desk on government schemes relating to the elderly.

If you support this project, or can help in anyway, please visit the project page on the Spark the Rise website. If you can't support the project and are just curious, we'd very much appreciate if you forwarded the link to anyone who could pitch in with resources or information.

If you are not aware of this Mahindra campaign, click here.

Spark the Rise Commercial


photos from the diabetes detection camp

Shield recently conducted a diabetes detection camp in cooperation with the SL Raheja Hospital. The idea was to give free screening to walk in patients and create awareness about the lifestyle disorder that is on the rise in India. The important message was that diabetes can be controlled, or better, with good care, all together avoided.






article in the hindustan times


After being mentioned in the Hindustan Times at the beginning of the year, the same newspaper has carried another story on the 7th of April in the Mumbai edition. It is titled If detected during early stages, dementia can be managed: doctors. The story is reproduced below.

Bhimrao Shinde, 72, would remember, in detail, his adolescent years but not what he ate for lunch. Last week, his wife, Sonabai, took him to Memory Clinic where he was diagnosed with dementia.
On March 29, Memory Clinic in Dharavi, an initiative by Shield Foundation, a non-profit, and Sion Hospital doctors began screening tests to identify dementia in the elderly.
Dementia, prevalent among the old, is a neurological condition that results in problems of memory, reasoning and understanding. Alzheimer's is the most common form of dementia. In most cases, dementia is a degenerative disorder, meaning it worsens over time and can only be managed, not cured.

To mark World Health Day on Saturday, the clinic will distribute senior citizen cards to help patients get benefits at civic hospitals. This year, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has identified 'ageing and health' as the theme.

“Two years ago, Bhimrao started forgetting small things, but we did not pay too much attention to it,” said Sonabai.

Doctors said one in 100 people between 65 and 70 years suffer from dementia. The risk doubles every five years and 16% of population aged between 85 and 90 may have some form of dementia, said Dr Nilesh Shah from Sion Hospital.

According to WHO, the senior citizen population in India will grow from 77 million (7.4% of the total population) in 2001 to 300 million (17%) by 2050.

“Often signs of dementia are ignored and accepted as part of the ageing process,” said Swati Ingole, founder, Shield Foundation. Doctors at Memory Clinic conduct a Mini Mental State Examination, which looks at 30 aspects and has questions related to cognition and memory such as what a patient has eaten that day or what his or her name is. If a patient scores less than 24, he is referred for further tests.

“About 15 % cases are treatable if detected early, but patients come in only at late stages. Old people are brought in only when they have problems recognising their children or begin to soil their clothes,” said Dr Sajid Ali Khan, consultant psychiatrist, Kohinoor Hospital. Raees Khan, for example, admitted his wife, Nazbunnisa, soon after she began forgetting simple things. “Once the medication started, she felt much better. The medication is life-long, but now she leads a normal life,” said Khan.