Friends of IHMP - UK

Friends of IHMP - UK Supporting the Institute of Health Management Pachod in the district of Aurangabad, Maraharashtra, India
https://linktr.ee/friendsofihmp.uk

In the 1990s a small charity based around 2 health centres in Clifton, Bristol, called the Whiteladies Health Share Proj...
24/03/2026

In the 1990s a small charity based around 2 health centres in Clifton, Bristol, called the Whiteladies Health Share Project (WHSP) was able to send a significant amount of money to the Institute of Health Management Pachod to help with the building of the Pune centre. The secretary of the WHSP, Ilfra Jarman, very kindly donated in her will a sizeable legacy for IHMP, which is being sent to IHMP through the Friends of IHMP (UK). I am the chairman of the Friends of IHMP, but I was also the chairman of the WHSP, so I am so proud of what these 2 small charities have done and are doing to support the work of IHMP.
The photo attached is of the foundation stone of the Pune building.
World Health Organization (WHO) World's Children's Prize Girl Up Girls Not Brides Christian Aid GlobalGiving UNICEF Gates Foundation

On International Women's Day Dr Preethi John has posted this on LinkedIn.Some institutions are built on vision. Some on ...
08/03/2026

On International Women's Day Dr Preethi John has posted this on LinkedIn.
Some institutions are built on vision. Some on funding. Some on ambition.
Institute of Health Management Pachod was built on something harder and rarer — a conviction, sustained across nearly a century, that women and girls deserve better.

Nearly a century. Seven million lives. One unbroken mission.

On this International Women's Day I have written about the leaders who never made headlines — and what their work means for all of us.
Some people build careers. Some build reputations. Some build wealth.

The people behind Institute of Health Management Pachod built something harder and rarer — a conviction, sustained across nearly a century, that women and girls deserve better.

This is their story.
Where It Begins

The story begins almost a century ago. Dr Gladys Jeffree — a doctor from Bath — came to Pachod, a remote village in Maharashtra, and began providing healthcare in a region where, in the years before Indian independence, primary healthcare infrastructure was scarce. She gave decades of her life to that community. That presence, and that spirit, became the foundation of what followed.

In 1976, a young medical graduate, Dr Ashok Dyalchand, expanded that foundation — building a community-rooted public health programme that reached far beyond the hospital walls. He trained local health workers, established research systems, and took healthcare into the surrounding villages — reaching communities who would never come to a hospital. He never left — and while he continues to guide IHMP, he has identified and is nurturing the next generation of leaders, ensuring the mission endures beyond any one person. From that vision, sustained over five decades, grew the Institute of Health Management Pachod — IHMP.

And Manisha Khale has been at the heart of that work for nearly five decades. I wrote about her yesterday — you can find that post in this link https://www.linkedin.com/posts/drpreethijohn_internationalwomensday-womensleadership-globalhealth-activity-7435612735867998208-2Ibu?utm_medium=ios_app&rcm=ACoAAASJEPoBaLe5HqY24fkd14xB7TCxVeOQGIw&utm_source=social_share_send&utm_campaign=whatsapp
What Fifty Years of Conviction Builds

IHMP has walked alongside women at every stage of life.

Baby. Child. Adolescent. Woman. Mother. Elder.

Preventing malnutrition in newborns. Keeping girls in school. Delaying child marriage. Empowering adolescent girls through Life Skills Education and peer leaders — girls teaching girls, communities changing from within. Supporting young married women in rural villages and urban slums. And crucially — working with boys and young men on how to treat girls. Because lasting change requires everyone.

IHMP's programmes have been adopted as national policy by the Government of India. UNICEF has replicated its approaches across multiple states. Its research has been published in The Lancet. It has been invited by the World Bank and World Health Organization (WHO) to shape national frameworks.

That work continues today — in rural Maharashtra and in the urban slums of Pune, reaching the girls and women that formal systems still overlook.
Recognised Across the World

In 1984, IHMP received national recognition from the Ford Foundation for pioneering maternal and neonatal health services through Traditional Birth Attendants.

In 2006, IHMP was invited to the Kennedy Centre, Washington D.C. to receive the Investing in Women Award for Innovation from the International Centre for Research on Women — for its Life Skills Education programme for adolescent girls.

In 2013, IHMP won the Dasra Girl Power Award for addressing the sexual and reproductive health needs of married adolescent girls.

In 2014, IHMP received the John Diefenbaker Defender of Human Rights and Freedom Award from the Government of Canada.

In 2019, IHMP received the World's Children's Prize — the children's Nobel Prize — awarded in Sweden, for its work on the rights of the girl child.

Nearly a century. One conviction. Recognised across the world.
A Living, Growing Organisation

Institute of Health Management Pachod is not a story of the past. It is a living, growing organisation — still in the field, still building, still leading. Today IHMP continues to develop adolescent girls as peer leaders, rolling its Life Skills model into new communities and partnering globally to amplify what community-rooted leadership can achieve.
The UK Connection

The UK connection to this story runs just as deep.

Dr linkedin.com/in/michael-whitfield-a03b651b8 Michael Whitfield — Senior Lecturer in General Practice at Bristol University and GP partner at a Bristol practice that became home to the Whiteladies Health Share Project, a community fundraising charity dedicated to supporting IHMP's work in India — and his wife Mavis Whitfield have been part of IHMP's story for decades. A community in Bristol chose to care deeply about a village in Maharashtra — and backed that care with decades of fundraising and personal commitment.

Their son David Whitfield now chairs Friends of IHMP UK, carrying that same commitment forward into the next generation — raising vital funds and giving IHMP a global voice. Their current focus: supporting IHMP's Life Skills Education programme for adolescent girls and young women and setting up a training centre.
Why This Matters Today

The leaders who change the world are not always the ones on the stage. Sometimes they are the ones who came to a remote village almost a century ago and began providing healthcare where there was none. Sometimes they are the ones who stayed for decades, seeing the women others overlooked, building what others wouldn't, holding steady when it would have been easier to leave.

Dr Gladys Jeffree. Dr Ashok Dyalchand . Dr Michael and Mavis Whitfield. David Whitfield.

And Manisha Khale — who never stopped.

Leadership leaves a legacy.

Women pay it forward — to the generations they raise, in allyship with men, in collaboration and co-creation. Not competition. Not charity. Partnership.

On this International Women's Day — we go forward. Together.
Support IHMP's Work

I am sharing the following in a personal capacity as a trustee of UK Friends of IHMP.

IHMP's Life Skills Education programme works with adolescent girls, young married women, and boys and young men across rural Maharashtra and the urban slums of Pune.

UK and international donors — donate via GlobalGiving:

https://www.globalgiving.org/donate/18405/ashish-gram-rachna-trust-institute-of-health-management/

If your employer uses Benevity for workplace giving:

https://causes.benevity.org/projects/710088

Based in India — donate directly:

www.ihmp.org/donate-now

Follow and support Friends of IHMP UK:

https://linktr.ee/friendsofihmp.uk
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06/03/2026

International Women's Day
This post was posted on the Linkedin account of one of the trustee's of The Friends of IHMP (UK)

There are leaders who build careers. And there are leaders who build something far more important.

Manisha Khale is the second kind.

She arrived in Pachod, Maharashtra, India, in 1978, in her 20s and co-founded the Institute of Health Management Pachod. An organisation with a history that stretches across two continents, sustained by decades of dedication from well-wishers in the UK — but that is a story for another time.

Manisha never really left. And that decision — to stay, to build, to keep going — changed the lives of over seven million people.

In 2003, her former professor from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine visited her in Pachod. He looked at twenty-five years of work and asked one question:

"You keep insisting that Life Skills Education has empowered adolescent girls. Where is the evidence?"

Manisha didn't defend herself.

She sat with adolescent girls — endlessly, patiently — until she understood what empowerment meant in their own words. She designed a measurement scale grounded entirely in their perceptions.

That scale is still in use today.

This is what real leadership looks like. Not defending your assumptions. Going back to the people you serve and asking them to teach you.

She came as a nutritionist with one mission: prevent malnutrition in children and low birth weight in newborns. Across five decades— child marriages delayed, adolescent girls empowered, and generations of communities in Maharashtra transformed.

Seven million people. One woman. Five decades.

I arrived at IHMP as a young intern. Manisha was already there. That internship became my first job. I left Pachod — but Pachod never quite left me. Decades later, I found my way back — this time as a trustee of UK Friends of IHMP. Because some work you simply cannot walk away from.

This International Women's Day — this one is for Manisha Khale. Who stayed. Who built. Who shaped what came next.


World Health Organization (WHO) World's Children's Prize Girl Up Girls Not Brides UN Girls' Education Initiative

When Girls Raise Their Voice for ChangeIntroductionInstitute of Health Management Pachod conducts Life Skills Education ...
25/02/2026

When Girls Raise Their Voice for Change

Introduction

Institute of Health Management Pachod conducts Life Skills Education (LSE) programs, each for a period of six months. While undergoing LSE the girls are organized into Girls Collectives (Kishori Mandals), which are managed by the girls themselves.

The Kishori Mandal members are imparted leadership skills. The aim is to empower these girls for future leadership roles. By participating in its activities, the girls develop leadership potential and learn about their rights, team building, and collective responsibility. The office bearers of the Kishori Mandal are elected democratically.

Case Study

Eknathnagar, a small village with a population of 448 people, has only 36 adolescent girls. They have organized themselves into a collective, which they named the Prerna Kishori Mandal. By identifying community problems and taking collective action, this Girls Collective has become a source of inspiration for adolescent girls in other villages.

The girls from this village and several adjoining villages go to school in a nearby town. The girls were facing a critical problem at school. The toilets were filthy with no proper water supply. This situation not only discouraged girls from using them but also posed serious risks to their health. After their life skills education and leadership training, the Kishori Mandal members of these villages decided to take collective action to rectify this problem, with adolescent girls belonging to the Prerna Kishori Mandal in Eknathnagar taking the lead.

With help from IHMP staff, they prepared a formal letter demanding better toilet facilities and water supply in their school. The members of the Girls Collectives from several villages went to the appropriate Government official to submit their letter and demanded urgent action. This joint effort created a strong collective voice, ensuring that their concerns would not be ignored.

For the first time, the adolescent girls of Eknathnagar and adjoining villages realized the power of collective action. They overcame their hesitation and learned to present their demands boldly to the local authorities. The application for hygienic toilet facilities became more than just a request—it became a symbol of leadership, unity, and empowerment.

The story of Prerna Kishori Mandal shows how a small group of adolescent girls can spark meaningful change when they acquire self-confidence. By raising their voices for safe sanitation, they not only addressed a health issue but also demonstrated their identity as future leaders.
You can support this project on GlobalGiving https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/empowerment-of-154000-adolescent-girls-in-india/
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This is the latest GlobalGiving report for Institute of Health Management Pachod highlighting the benefits of the Lifesk...
04/01/2026

This is the latest GlobalGiving report for Institute of Health Management Pachod highlighting the benefits of the Lifeskills Education Programme that over 100,000 girls have now attended in the villages around Pachod in Maharashtra India.
If you would like to support these girls here is the link to the project on GlobalGiving.
https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/empowerment-of-154000-adolescent-girls-in-india/
Girls Not Brides American Academy of Pediatrics

29/12/2025
Tomorrow is GlobalGiving Giving Tuesday Starting at midnight Eastern Time or 5am GMT and lasts 36 hours. All donations w...
01/12/2025

Tomorrow is GlobalGiving Giving Tuesday Starting at midnight Eastern Time or 5am GMT and lasts 36 hours. All donations will be proportionally matched by GlobalGiving. This project is helping to reduce child marriage persuading parents to keep their daughters in education. https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/empowerment-of-154000-adolescent-girls-in-india/ Girl Up Girls Not Brides Global Partnership for Education American Academy of Pediatrics

4 DAYS TO GO - GlobalGiving  GIVING TUESDAY.36 HOURS TO MAKE A DIFFERENCEInstitute of Health Management Pachod unique pr...
27/11/2025

4 DAYS TO GO - GlobalGiving GIVING TUESDAY.
36 HOURS TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE
Institute of Health Management Pachod unique project giving adolescent girls empowerment to change their lives, receive an education after 15 years of age. Staying in education to at least 18 years will prevent child marriage.
https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/empowerment-of-154000-adolescent-girls-in-india/

Global giving will proportionally matching all donations in the 36 hours from 2nd December midnight Eastern Time (5am GMT) to midday 3rd December Eastern Time (5pm GMT)
Global Partnership for Education
American Academy of Pediatrics
Girl Up
Girls Not Brides
Oxfam Great Britain
Microsoft
CAFOD
World's Children's Prize
UNICEF



One week today GlobalGiving has a fundraising campaign called Giving Tuesday2nd December 2025 for 36 hoursInstitute of H...
25/11/2025

One week today GlobalGiving has a fundraising campaign called Giving Tuesday
2nd December 2025 for 36 hours
Institute of Health Management Pachod has a brilliant project on GlobalGiving
https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/empowerment-of-154000-adolescent-girls-in-india/
Please consider donating to this amazing work which helps to reduce child marriage
American Academy of Pediatrics
Girl Up
Girls Not Brides
Davinder Kaur
Christian Aid
Oxfam Great Britain
Global Partnership for Education


IInstitute of Health Management Pachodhad a very important and huge event held on 25 September 2025 in Pachod.2,019 adol...
30/09/2025

IInstitute of Health Management Pachodhad a very important and huge event held on 25 September 2025 in Pachod.
2,019 adolescent girls were awarded certificates for completing the internationally acclaimed Life Skills education programme which is 6 months in duration. These girls came from 35 ASHA areas from 25 villages and had completed the courses over the last 3 years. Several adolescent girls gave testimonies about how this education benefitted them and changed the course of their lives. The adolescent girls staged a street play, a theatrical performance they make on a regular basis in their villages. The street play was on the importance of education for girls. The empowerment that girls have undergone as a result of IHMP’s intervention was evident throughout the function.
379 adolescent girls received scholarships, totalling £3,500 ($4,700) for bicycles for going to neighbouring villages for higher education, course fees for computer literacy, admission fees for higher education, etc. Over 4000 girls and parents attended this function. The Divisional Commissioner of Marathwada (covering 8 districts of central Maharashtra) and ex Chief Secretary of Maharashtra were chief guests to distribute the certificates and scholarships.
WWorld's Children's PrizeGGlobalGivingGGirl UpGGirls Not BridesOOxfam Great BritainOOxfamCChristian AidCCAFODWWorld Health Organization (WHO)AAmerican Academy of PediatricsUUNICEF
https://youtu.be/7aJy3JbJQmU?si=D-8z8hukGeUKJDut
Please follow The Friends of IHMP visit
https:/linktr.ee/friendsofihmp.uk

On Monday, GlobalGiving new campaign started "Passport to Purpose". This campaign will run until Friday 12th September.T...
10/09/2025

On Monday, GlobalGiving new campaign started "Passport to Purpose". This campaign will run until Friday 12th September.
This brand new report on Global giving for Institute of Health Management Pachod shows the massive benefit of supporting this project.
Here is the link to the IHMP GlobalGiving page
https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/empowerment-of-154000-adolescent-girls-in-india/
From my post on Monday
IHMP are now planning 2 of the most ambitious interventions which will enable IHMP AGRT to reach one million adolescent girls.
1. An innovative Peer led adolescent girls programme wherein 2 peer leaders (adolescent girls aged 6 to 18 years) that have undergone leadership training, will adopt and empower 10 girls in their neighbourhood and motivate their parents to send them for higher education.
2. To establish a training and resource centre for a large network of NGOs in India and neighbouring countries to replicate the effective interventions demonstrated by IHMP AGRT.

Any support that can be given during this week for this amazing work would be very appreciated and will help towards this aim of impacting 1 MILLION ADOLESCENT GIRLS.
Please consider donating to this project this week.
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