How Her Voice is Transforming Women’s Futures

The voice initiated under the auspices of the Artemis Health Sciences Foundation is a movement dedicated to women’s health, strengthening and self -confidence. In essence, he tries to create safe spaces for the initiative dialogue, to equip women with life skills, and to develop a culture in which every woman’s voice is accepted and valuable. In this background, Shalini Kanwar Chand – Director, Artemis Medicare Services Ltd. and the President, the Artemis Health Sciences Foundation – speaks about the inspiration, vision and influence of his voice.
His voice was born out of my interactions with the community women I witnessed the difficulties they face – silencing around the weight of reproductive and emotional health and social pressures. While encouraging women to make conscious choices about their bodies, lives and future, he emphasized the urgent need for a safe platform that encourages himself value, prosperity and independence.
Why does his voice go beyond health services:
Strengthening women only requires more than health care. Professional skills, financial literacy and trust development are equally important for the social, economic and emotional development of women. His voice was designed as a holistic movement to address all these dimensions for sustainable growth and independence.
Together with Onkar Singh Kanwar, Shalini Kanwar Chand joined by distinguished doctors of Artemis hospitals and stressed the hospital’s commitment to leadership and excellence in health services.
On silence and stigmatization:
His voice appeals to taboos through workshops, peer debates, storytelling and Nukkad Natak, and create unjust areas that women feel safe to speak. By dealing with families and communities, these conversations are normalized throughout generations. We also create aid line services to listen to complaints and provide consultancy support.
Physical and emotional health is in depth. Emotional flexibility strengthens general health and when mental stress is handled alongside physical care, women can achieve a more balanced, sustainable sense of prosperity in their daily lives.
It is based on our previous programs such as voice, comfort and trust. Menstrual hygiene, body positivity and self-esteem focus on self-esteem, expanding this vision to the trust of life skills, financial literacy and emotional flexibility.
Although it was initially modest, I see that it has reached thousands of women, but not only individuals, but also all families and communities. The aim is to normalize speeches about women’s health, inspire economic participation and create a sustainable, mentoring -oriented movement. Ultimately, we want a world where every woman’s voice is heard, their choices are respected and where they are given space for the development of their abilities.
About global experiences that shape the approach:
Living and working in places like Singapore, Harvard and Insead has exposed me to women from different pasts and taught me the value of cultural sensitivity in solutions. In India, this, to blend scientific meticulousness with empathy – to address local norms when creating effective, inclusive strategies for strengthening.
In personal applications based on it:
Attention, registering in the diary, meditation, yoga and reading with reading. It keeps me connected to meeting people and hearing their stories. These practices ensure that my work depends on empathic, purposeful and real world experiences.




