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ADJUVA LEGAL® • 1m
🏥💨 Pollution ≠ Progress. It’s a Carcinogen. India records 1.4 million new cancer cases annually. That number is projected to reach 1.57 million in 2025. And no - it’s not just tobacco, diet, or genetics. It’s air pollution 🏭 It’s industrial waste 🧪 It’s the smoke inside rural kitchens 🍳 and the smog outside urban homes 🌫️ 🗣️ Dr. Shirish Alurkar’s warning is clear: “Pollution is not just a nuisance - it’s a slow, silent carcinogen shaping India’s future disease burden.” 🚺 Women who’ve never smoked are developing lung cancer. 🧒 Young patients are showing up with diseases once confined to the elderly. And yet, the silence is deafening. This isn’t just a health crisis. It’s a POLICY FAILURE, a climate failure, a civic failure ⚠️ So here’s the call: 📣 If we don’t act now, no hospital expansion will be enough. 📚 If we don’t teach youth the link between air, soil, and survival - what are we even fighting for? Let’s make pollution literacy part of the syllabus. Let’s make clean air a constitutional demand. Let’s make WriteToWin a movement that doesn’t just spotlight founders - but rewrites futures.
Founder of withy • 11m
India is one of the most polluted countries in the world, with air pollution having a significant impact on the health of its citizens. Life expectancy Particulate pollution shortens the average Indian's life expectancy by 5.3 years. In Delhi, the mo
See MoreFounder of withy • 11m
Pollution can significantly impact human life by causing a range of health issues including respiratory diseases like asthma, lung cancer, heart disease, and even impacting cognitive function, mental health, and premature death, primarily due to the
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Founder of withy • 11m
Reducing pollution is important for human health, the environment, and the economy: 1.Human health Poor air quality can cause cardiovascular and respiratory disease, cancers, and other health problems. In 2019, the World Health Organization (WHO) es
See MoreThatmoonemojiguy 🌝 • 4m
I just stumbled upon a startup that literally turns air pollution into ink and it absolutely blew my mind. It’s called Graviky Labs, and the brains behind it is Anirudh Sharma, an MIT Media Lab researcher who had a crazy thought while watching a die
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