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Friday, August 27, 2010

Road Safety

We have started a road safety module this time, along with our anti tobacco education... and will be telling students about road safety and rules...

Road safety is a big issue. We have seen so many accidents victim during our medical postings and we wish to generate awareness. Please drive safely and follow traffic rules. And please do
not indulge in Road Rage.


Thursday, August 19, 2010

Workshops almost over

Hi.
Our workshop for the volunteers are almost over. We will be conducting our activities in various schools of NMC Nagpur from Monday onwards.

Please feel free to contact us for any detail/suggestion.

Say NaTo Tobacco

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Thanks Hriday-Shan

Our methodology is based on research and material provided by Hriday-Shan , Health Related Information Dissemination Amongst Youth, Student Health Action Network, a Delhi based NGO

check more details here
http://www.hriday-shan.org

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Like us on facebook! and visit our youtube channel

Nagpur Anti Tobacco Organisation has now its own fan page on facebook :)
visit this link http://www.facebook.com/pages/Nagpur-Anti-Tobacco-Organisation/148278958516066
The page will be updated frequently with news related to NATO and other stuff.


And also visit our new youtube channel http://www.youtube.com/user/teach4health
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Friday, July 23, 2010

Nato's activity going to start soon

Hi
We are soon going to start our activity for anti tobacco education to school children soon, maybe in the second or third week of August.

This time we are conducting our activities in 50 schools of Nagpur Municipal Corporation (NMC) along with the help of NMC. We really thank NMC standing committee chairman Mr. Sandeep Jhoshi for his support for this cause. This project is titled Project Mukti.

Also, there will be a one day activity on Road Safety education among the school children, sponsored by a Kusumgar Group.

You are invited to take part in the activities among our volunteers and also your valuable suggestions are welcome.


Meanwhile, a facebook user Mr. Vijay Bhanu send me a link of this great site. Do visit once http://www.vchangeu.com/quit.html

Say NA TO Tobacco
\m/

Sunday, July 18, 2010

A very Nice blog

Hi
saw this nice blog today, its by Mr. Vincent, situated in Mumbai, working against tobacco policies of govt.



also a nice site by his friend .. http://www.oralcancerawareness.org/



\m/

Saturday, June 26, 2010

NATO show held on 20th


\m/

but really disopointed by tims of India reporting. Didn't mentioned even the NATO's name. sad....

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Nagpur Anti Tobacco Organisation Tshirts

We have decided to print Nagpur Anti Tobacco organisation Tshirts .... it will cost Rs.180/- per tshirts.

It is a white T shirt with Nato logo (this one )

printed on the front. Initially we are printing few t shirts,
...so interested buyers please let me know by 5th of June so that the t
shirts are available before our Music Concert. :)

Say na to tobacco

\m/

Music Concert by NATO -- 20th June

Nagpur Anti Tobacco Organisation is organising a music concert at IMA hall on 20th of June. Performers are - Riffing Culture and Psygma... the best bands of Nagpur.

Its Going to be a fun filled musical evening. Entry is on invitation restricted to our Donors. To learn how you can donate and get an entry pass, please feel free to call 9970856313 \ 9325636785 . It cost only 100/- and all the money will go to fund anti tobacco education of children.

Keep Rocking ..... \m/

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Planning for a fund raiser

A few days back, Aditya and me were thinking of how to manage the funds needed for our August September activity. The poor chap was a little tense too. We went for some coffee at the famous mamaji and there, this Idea came. Why not organize a charity show.

So we are planning to have a Rock band performance in mid June. I contacted Sifar. By the way, I had contacted other popular bands of Nagpur, including mine :). So let's see if we can organize something.

Ideas and comments are required. :D

Documentary on ....well us....

This is what we had been upto these days :) .... check this vid ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x9LBLdveuh0

Friday, May 14, 2010

Logo of Nagpur anti tobacco organisation !


The official logo of our organisation
Thanks to Zeeshan for making it ..... :)

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Anti smoking site for kids ...

Hi..

Came across this nice site aiming at kids health ...
If you have kids in your house, just forward them by email, facebook, orkut etc. this link ....


check here

http://kidshealth.org/kid/watch/house/smoking.html


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Sunday, March 14, 2010

Times of India


Unending thanks to Snehlata Shrivastava ma'am, Times of India, for publishing our story, which will go a long way in helping and supporting our cause.

Also, thanks to Mr. Sudarshan, photographer, for capturing the footage of our work

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Activity 6

Activity 6 concluded, and was amazing fun

Role playing wile learning about ways of saying no to tobacco, was a new experience for the students as well as the volunteers

Friday, March 12, 2010

Activity 6

Activity 6 relating to enacting real life situations related to tobacco consumption is up tomorrow...

Saturday, March 6, 2010

This is what we do

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Volunteer Experience

Abhinav enjoys his activities and can't want till it's time for d next one.....

Read more

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Activity 5

Activity 5 is scheduled for this Saturday, 6/03/2010, in all schools

It deals with explaining students about various reasons for not consuming tobacco

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PS: All members wanting authorship ( ability to post on the blog, please contact me)

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Activity 4

Activity 4 that deals with information about passive smoking is gonna be conducted in our selected schools on Friday ie 26/02/2010.

Best of luck to all volunteers!


Why volunteer?

When we were just getting started with the idea of Teach for Health, we thought hard about how we could tailor the entire program to benefit not just the children, but also the volunteers. To give them something that they wouldn't forget in a hurry. We believe that the volunteers gain as much from the program as the children. Their lives are touched just as much as the children's. If you want to know how, just see our volunteer experiences section.
And it's not very difficult to understand why. The joy of reaching out to and helping another person has been consistently highlighted as the most profound of joys by classical thinkers such as Buddha and Gandhi and modern ones such as Professor Morrie (in Tuesdays with Morrie. See here.) and Tony Robbins. (See his TED video here)
Presently, very few youngsters in our society are regularly engaged in community service. Not because they are unconcerned, apathetic or lazy, but because they haven't been provided an oppurtunity to experience the joy of pure, unadulterated service. They haven't ever gone back to a classroom after leaving school. And so we want to give people this chance to experience a joy that cannot be replicated in a movie theatre, a restaurant, a theme park, a holiday or with a loved one. The joy of teaching children you would have never known otherwise, and the novel experience of being a teacher and a role model.
We don't believe in looking at service as doing a favour to someone, or as an obligation of everyone who lives in a society. We simply hope that people will try teaching just like they try a new restaurant or place. And it is our firm belief that once they try it, they will be hooked.(Not least because it is an inexpensive way to have fun. Like they say, 'The best things in life are always for free.')
Nobody could have put it better than Gandhi when he said, 'I know not everyone is suited to the act of service, but if you are, there is no greater joy you could obtain on this earth.'
Also, we at NATO are committed to making this a fulfilling experience for you and will do everything to make sure you carry back more than a few memories.

So, does it work?

So how do we know that the money and time we are all putting in is not just a feel good exercise and is actually causing impact?
The curriculum that we are using has been tested in a group randomised trial conducted by HRIDAY. Its details can be found here The results of this trial show that in the intervention schools, the use of tobacco decreased by 15%, while in the control schools, the use of tobacco increased by 67%. Moreover, the intervention was able to significantly modify all the psychosocial risk factors associated with tobacco use.
Our program, however, differs from the HRIDAY model in a few ways.
1) Our program seeks to utilise the positive role model potential of college youth who abstain from tobacco and advocate for the same. That is why volunteers implement most of our activities, and we hypothesize that this approach will lead to even greater effectiveness of the program.

2) The HRIDAY model was a two year intervention, with seven classroom activities in each year. We plan to have classroom activities only in the first year, with reinforcement in subsequent years provided by posters, movies, talks and inter-school competitions.

Due to these differences, we are conducting our own group randomised trial with our first cohort of 1000 students. The results of this trial will only be available next year, but so far, the anecdotal reports are extremely encouraging. Some of these have been documented in a video that will be put up shortly.

Ultimately, through this format of school-based intervention we aim to modify the social acceptability of tobacco in the local community of Nagpur. Tobacco, to a large extent, is a local problem for which local solutions can be implemented successfully. In this regard, we aim to work with various stakeholders in the process, and move forward through a process of building consensus. We are therefore in talks with Nagpur Municipal Corporation, other NGOs in Nagpur (such as the Indian Medical Association (IMA)), National Medicos Organisation (NMO)and some others), colleges, eminent doctors and hospitals of the city and civil society in general.

What do we do?

We are currently focussing on carrying out anti-tobacco education in the government schools of Nagpur city. The curriculum for this intervention has been developed by HRIDAY, a Delhi based NGO that is a leading light on tobacco control in India(1). The intervention has 4 components- 7 peer led classroom activities, 6 posters to be hung in the classrooms, a parental involvement component wherein 6 postcards are sent home to the parents and finally a peer leadership component, focussing on peer led health activism outside of the classroom, including competitions between classroom and schools. The entire intervention is usually carried out over a span of two months. An innovative aspect of the intervention is an activity format in which elected peer leaders facilitate small groups.
All these activities are conducted in grade 7. Middle school students are most vulnerable to the psycho-social risk factors associated with tobacco. Most adult tobacco users develop the habit before they turn 18, and early intervention to modify the risk factors is essential to obtain real benefit.
Reinforcement of the message in subsequent years is essential to help kids remain tobacco free. Therefore, we will implement appropriate strategies to ensure reinforcement when the first cohort of kids enter grade 8.
We ultimately aim to enhance the capacity of individual schools to implement a grade wise education curriculum so as to ensure sustainability of the program.


References-
1)http://www.hriday-shan.org

Why Teach for Health

The first question that needs answering is why should someone contribute to this effort- the question of how do we really know we are making a difference? But before we tackle this question, let us run through some basic facts about the tobacco problem.
Tobacco today kills nearly one million people in india, making it the number one cause of preventable deaths in the country. To put this number in perspective, Tobacco kills more people than Tuberculosis (0.37 million), AIDS (0.2 million) and Road Traffic Accidents (0.1 million) combined(1). Moreover, unlike many other diseases, the tobacco problem doesn’t seem to be improving in our country. Research has shown that more and more young people are getting hooked onto tobacco in developing countries such as India (2), even as many developed countries see a steady decline in the number of tobacco users each year due to the intensified efforts of their government and civil society. The keyword here is civil society, whose engagement is essential to change the social acceptability of tobacco and to discourage its use.
There are three primary approaches to the tobacco problem (3)- regulatory, providing cessation treatment to existing users, and to prevent new users by providing school based education programs. And this is where a program such as Teach For Health comes in.
References-
1) Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine
2)http://www.hriday-shan.org/hriday/publications1.html
3)http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/reports/surgeongeneral/ataglance.pdf