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Why donate to poverty ?

Why donate to poverty ?

by MazherKhan 2022-10-06

SMYLE MYSHA

Project Overview:

Smyle Mysha is now starting fundraising for poverty. Where we can feed the hungry, help the poorer & provide medical help to those who can’t afford the treatment. Also, we are about to start helping those needy students with a lucky draw yearly 10 at least for now to make them keep studying and help the generation in the future.

Objectives:

  • Medical help
  • Feed the hunger
  • Educational help

Requirements/Task(s):

Task 1 Increase the number of members for medical help volunteers.

Task 2 Increase the number of members for feeding the hunger.

Task 3 Increase the number of members for collecting data for needy educational help.

Task 4 Provide data on the most required health treatment for poor people.

Task 5 Get data on places where we can camp for medical help.

Task 6 Volunteer and their area details where they can camp to feed the hungry.

Task 7 Yearly Educational fees of 10 students by lucky draw.

Research & Area where we can start our work

As per our research. The whole world is under a critical epidemic phase, and our country India is also suffering and in real trouble in a few fields such as Medical help, Education & Hunger. We are just starting and forwarding our hand to them. Our hands will increase in numbers to help these people, not but at least we can provide relief to some.

 

Research in details

Research Hunger & Starvation

From one of the leading websites, the data is really shocking and scary. According to FAO estimates in ‘The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World, 2020 report, 189.2 million people are undernourished in India. By this measure, 14% of the population is undernourished in India. Also, 51.4% of women of reproductive age between 15 to 49 years are anemic. Further according to the report 34.7% of the children aged under five in India are stunted (too short for their age), while 20% suffer from wasting, meaning their weight is too low for their height. Malnourished children have a higher risk of death from common childhood illnesses such as diarrhea, pneumonia, and malaria. The Global Hunger Index 2019 ranks India at 102 out of 117 countries on the basis of three leading indicators -- prevalence of wasting and stunting in children under 5 years, under 5 child mortality rate, and the proportion of undernourished in the population.

Key facts about hunger in India

India is home to the largest undernourished population in the world

189.2 million People i.e. 14% of our population is undernourished

20% of children under 5 are underweight

34.7% of children under 5 years of age are stunted

51.4% of women of reproductive age (15-49 years) are anemic

Let’s bring our hands out to least help some to decrease the number of these needy people.

 

Research details on medical issues

New Delhi: Some 2.4 million Indians die of treatable conditions every year, the worst situation among 136 nations studied for a report published in The Lancet.

Poor care quality leads to more deaths than insufficient access to healthcare--1.6 million Indians died due to poor quality of care in 2016, nearly twice as many as due to non-utilization of healthcare services (838,000 persons).

“For too long, the global health discourse has been focused on improving access to care, without sufficient emphasis on high-quality care,” Muhammad Pate, co-chair of the commission that produced the report, who is also chief executive of Big Win Philanthropy and former minister of state for health in Nigeria, said in a statement. “Providing health services without guaranteeing a minimum level of quality is ineffective, wasteful, and unethical,” he said.

Almost 122 Indians per 100,000 die due to poor quality of care each year, the study said, showing up India’s death rate due to poor care quality as worse than that of Brazil (74), Russia (91), China (46) and South Africa (93) and even its neighbors Pakistan (119), Nepal (93), Bangladesh (57) and Sri Lanka (51).

An estimated 8.6 million deaths in low- and middle-income countries every year are due to conditions treatable by healthcare, of which 5 million result from poor quality of care and 3.6 million from insufficient access to care, according to The Lancet Global Health Commission on High-Quality Health Systems, whose report has been published in the medical journal The Lancet on September 6, 2018. Source: The Lancet These deaths led to economic welfare losses of $6 trillion (Rs 429 lakh crore) in 2015, the commission estimated.

The total number of deaths from poor-quality care globally--5 million per year--is estimated to be five times as many as the annual global deaths from HIV/AIDS (1 million) and nearly three times more than deaths from diabetes (1.4 million), according to the study that was part of a two-year project that brought together 30 academics, policy-makers and health systems experts from 18 countries to examine how to measure and improve health systems’ quality worldwide.

Given the current global focus on universal healthcare (UHC), the commission found that expanded healthcare coverage does not always mean better quality. “The central role of quality is not yet sufficiently recognized in the global discourse on UHC and is underappreciated in many countries,” the report says.

“The impact of poor quality care goes well beyond mortality but can lead to unnecessary suffering, persistent symptoms, loss of function, and a lack of trust in the health system,” commission chair Margaret E. Kruk of Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, USA, said in a statement.

“Other side effects are wasted resources and catastrophic health expenditures,” Kruk said, “Given our findings, it is not surprising that only one-quarter of people in low and middle-income countries believe that their health systems work well.”

 

So these are some of the points we are mentioning above. Now it turns to make us all get together and fight this situation or else it will eat humanity in a real quick time. Let’s join together and start working in such an area as well. A little help from some who do not even bother to think can give life to many who seek medical treatment.

Research data on illiteracy in India

          Literacy is the bridge between misery and hope – Kofi Annan Yes, the fact, and statements are so true.

 

Literacy is also a harbinger of development. Some of the most developed nations in this world have exceptionally high literacy levels. USA and UK with 99% and China with 97%. However, India shows a complete opposite overview. It has the highest rate of illiterate adults, with an overall literacy rate standing at 77.7%. Over 287 million people in India are illiterate, and this amounts to 37% of the global total. Now, with such low rates and extreme illiteracy conditions, problems are out to emerge. In this article, I delve deeper into them and take a precise look at the ‘consequences’ of illiteracy.

Unemployment

No company wants to employ an illiterate person. Illiteracy has a direct impact on the high unemployment rate in India. Currently standing at 7.8%, a major chunk of the unemployed are illiterate people.  Illiteracy has deemed them unable to find a job and earn. This causes poverty, which in turn causes illiteracy.

People are unable to afford education for their children, and they grow up illiterate. Thus, they are unable to find a job, and the cycle starts all over again. Reports show that 115 million people in India live below the poverty line, causing high illiteracy and unemployment rates.

Slow GDP Growth

GDP or Gross Domestic Product refers to a measure of the market value of certain goods. Countries with high literacy rates have a way higher GDP.  The USA has a GDP of 20.54 lakh crores USD, whereas India was that of 2.72 lakh crores USD. Such a stark difference!

Illiteracy has a direct relation with this low GDP. Illiterate people have lesser access to education, growth, and opportunity. Thus they are unable to contribute to any form of GDP growth. Imagine if the 287 million people were literate and contributing to GDP, what the rates must have been!

Child Labor

Every 11th child in India is a victim of child labor. Over 10.1 Million kids are working in various industries to support their families. These sky-high rates are once again, a result of poverty caused due to illiteracy. Since their parents are illiterate and families live in poverty, they are stripped of a normal childhood and forced to work. If their parents were literate, they would’ve had a decent job, and they would’ve been in school and not the dump yards.

It’s solely due to the poverty caused due to illiteracy that they are forced to work in the form of child labor. Stated above are some of the major consequences of illiteracy in India. Illiteracy is an issue that can be controlled. If citizens set their thoughts on curbing it, it can very well be controlled!

As I know education is the key to success and children are the ones who can achieve this gold. Let’s make them get started to secure and make the future beautiful. It is time to get stand against this illiteracy. Shake hands and fight together.

 

Smyle Mysha is taking this initiative and the one-day whole country will come forward to work against these 3 critical issues in India.

Join Today.

Mr. MAZHER KHAN

MazherKhan
MazherKhan
Published on : 2022-10-06