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Indian Institute Of Technology Students Develop Products To Help Boost Woman Hygiene

Indian Institute of Technology students are venturing to women hygiene sector with start-ups like Cleanse Right and Sanfe providing solutions for the same

Indian Institute Of Technology Students Develop Products To Help Boost Woman Hygiene

New Delhi: If you thought start-ups are all about technology, IITians are out to redefine that, smash taboos and create awareness around issues, like women hygiene, in their own innovative manner and ways. One of such efforts is a start-up named Sanfe. Set up about a year ago by Archit Agarwal and Harry Sehrawat, both students of IIT-Delhi, it has touched the Rs 1 crore revenue mark as per their claims. On a trip to the mountains, one of their female friends contracted urinary tract infection after using a dirty public washroom. It pushed them on the path of thinking and they realised over 50 per cent of Indian women face this kind of problem.

They decided to develop a device, which could be affordable and also easy to use. And thus came the ‘Stand and pee’. Priced at Rs 10 a piece, the device has registered good online sales.

They also developed special oil for women to get relief from period pain. According to them, relief roll on help in immediate and long-lasting relaxation from period pain.

Also Read: In A First, Central Reserve Police Force To Install Sanitary Pad Dispensers For Women Officers In Combat

The initial plan was to create a product to help women avoid dirty public washrooms. Later, we realised that there are lot of things that must be done to improve the state of female hygiene in India, Mr. Sehrawat told IANS.

Another product that has been trying to bring a change in the society is an affordable device, developed by two students of IIT-Bombay and IIT-Goa. It helps clean reusable sanitary pads.

Devyani Maladkar (IIT-Goa) and Aishwarya Agarwal (IIT-Bombay) set up Cleanse Right to address the growing threat of menstrual waste to environment and public health. They invented an inexpensive and affordable device to clean reusable sanitary pads. It costs around Rs 1,500.

Also Read: 33-Year-Old Kashmiri Woman IAS Officer Spreads Awareness About Menstruation

The machine has been designed in such a way that it rubs the cotton sanitary pads clean like human hands in a hygienic manner, Aishwarya told IANS.

Both Sanfe and Cleanse Right are in the process of getting their inventions patented. However, while Sanfe has already hit the market with its products, the invention by Aishwarya and Devyani will have to wait for 2-3 years to be available commercially.

NDTV тАУ Dettol Banega Swachh India campaign lends support to the Government of IndiaтАЩs┬аSwachh Bharat Mission (SBM). Helmed by Campaign Ambassador┬аAmitabh Bachchan, the campaign aims to spread awareness about┬аhygiene┬аand┬аsanitation, the importance of building┬аtoilets┬аand making India┬аopen defecation free (ODF)┬аby October 2019, a target set by┬аPrime Minister Narendra Modi, when he launched Swachh Bharat Abhiyan in 2014. Over the years, the campaign has widened its scope to cover issues like┬аair pollution,┬аwaste management,┬аplastic ban,┬аmanual scavenging┬аand┬аmenstrual hygiene. The campaign has also focused extensively on┬аmarine pollution,┬аclean Ganga Project┬аand rejuvenation of┬аYamuna, two of IndiaтАЩs major river bodies.

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