15,000 students from 50 schools in Delhi take part in hygiene drive on Global Handwashing Day
Press Trust of India | October 15, 2025 | 07:28 PM IST | 2 mins read
The initiative focused on promoting regular handwashing and hygiene through interactive sessions and live demonstrations. Students received hygiene kits as part of a campaign that has already reached over 30,000 children across Delhi-NCR.
NEW DELHI: On the occasion Global Handwashing Day on Wednesday, 15,000 students from 50 schools across Delhi-NCR took part in a large-scale hygiene awareness drive. The event featured interactive activities, expert-led sessions, and live demonstrations to promote regular handwashing and hygiene among schoolchildren.
The event was organised by the Illness to Wellness Foundation in collaboration with the Physical Education Foundation of India (PEFI) under the theme “Swasth Haath, Swasth Bachpan” (Healthy Hands, Healthy Childhood), a statement read. The main celebration was held at The Indian School in Sadiq Nagar and formed part of the broader Illness to Wellness campaign, which focuses on preventive healthcare and community awareness, it said.
The campaign was rolled out simultaneously in over 50 private, public and government schools, including Delhi Public School, East of Kailash; Birla Vidya Niketan, Pushp Vihar; Shaheed Rajpal DAV Public School, Dayanand Vihar; and GD Goenka Public School, Bahadurgarh, it further added. Anil Rajput, Chairperson of the Advisory Council, Illness to Wellness Foundation, said healthy hygiene practices begin at an early age and schools are the ideal setting to shape these habits.
Also read JAC 10th, 12th compartment results 2025 declared; direct link at jacresults.com
Promoting hygiene among schoolchildren
“Germ-free hands can prevent the spread of countless infections, and creating awareness around this is a small step with a big impact,” he said. Tania Joshi, Principal of The Indian School, said building hygiene awareness among children is not just about cleanliness but about nurturing responsibility and care for oneself and others. “Such initiatives help students understand that small habits, like washing hands properly, can make a big difference,” she added.
The campaign used experiential learning tools such as live demonstrations and educational videos to make hygiene lessons more relatable and enjoyable. Volunteers from PEFI and the Foundation coordinated student engagement activities, and participants received hygiene kits at the end of the programme, the statement read. According to the statement, the Illness to Wellness campaign, launched last year, has already reached more than 30,000 students across Delhi-NCR, reinforcing its commitment to building a healthier, more aware generation.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- IIT Mandi makes attendance must for conference on reincarnation, ‘afterlife communication’
- IIT placements panel discusses ban on sharing of JEE Advanced ranks with recruiters
- CMC Vellore MBBS admissions handpicked doctors who’d serve in India; NEET paper leak renews debate
- IISER Pune plans BS-MS student exchange with other IISERs, more courses for professionals: Director
- West Bengal school teachers deployed for SIR now ordered to join Annapurna Bhandar duties; plan to move court
- IISER Bhopal discontinued BS-MS course over placement issues, offering BTech-MTech degrees: Director
- From next year, CBSE Class 12 answer sheets on Digilocker: Education ministry
- 'Son Im Crine': A teen and techies Vs the CBSE; or how the battle over the OSM portal unfolded online
- RTMNU Nagpur University exams plagued by delays, result errors; chaos disrupts academic schedule, internships
- Password in public? CBSE OSM portal under lens after 19-year-old hacker claims to bypass security measures