Isha naayar
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Breaking The Barriers With Empowering Through Education
Empowering through education is a process of imparting knowledge and skills that enable people to achieve their goals, enhance their capabilities, and improve their quality of life. Education is not just about acquiring academic knowledge; it also helps people to develop critical thinking, problem-solving, and decision-making skills that are necessary for success in life.
By Isha naayar3 years ago in Education
Top Ten Tips For Preventing Child Sexual Abuse
The five nations with the highest rates of child sexual abuse include India. According to a 2013 research there were over 48,000 child rape incidents reported between 2001 and 2011. The number of child rape cases increased by 336% throughout this time. Despite these figures, India has mostly shunned the subject since it is taboo.
By Isha naayar3 years ago in Journal
Learn How A Course in HealthCare Can Open Several Doors of Opportunities
In India, the healthcare industry is fragmented, and its quality benchmarks are scattered in public and private or rural and urban healthcare units. It is the medical assistants that act as a bridge between patients and hospitals in the healthcare system. This denotes that the future of the healthcare sector relies a lot on how well trained these medical professionals are. If you get certifications in any of the healthcare segment courses, it dispenses tremendous knowledge about the technical as well as industrial aspects. It also addresses how the talents need to upskill, and the practice needs to grow to cater to evolving needs. For expanding the ever-evolving healthcare industry, certified medical assistants are an invaluable resource.
By Isha naayar3 years ago in Education
Uprooting an Evil – Ways to Prevent Child Marriage in India
The social evil of child marriage has historical moorings in the Indian context. UNICEF defines child marriage as an informal or formal marriage union between an adult and a child or between two children, typically below 18 years. UN Women opines that child marriage is equivalent to 'forced marriage' as underage children cannot give legally valid consent. In India, the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act of 2006 states that child marriage implicates a marriage or a marriage that is going to be solemnized to which of the contracting parties is a child. The definition of child includes girls who are below 18 years and boys who are below 21 years. Despite stringent laws that criminalize and prohibit child marriage in contemporary India, the practice continues with little to no hindrance. As per statistics, one out of three adolescent girls (age group of 15 to 19) is married, and every second married adolescent girl has given birth to a child. It becomes crucial to find ways to prevent child marriage in the country.
By Isha naayar4 years ago in The Swamp



