There is a woman most of us know.. She is up before everyone else and asleep after. She tracks school schedules, remembers anniversaries, keeps the household running like clockwork—often without being asked. She gives so much of herself, every single day. But when it comes to her own health, especially something as important as breast health, it often takes a backseat. Not out of neglect, but simply because she is so used to putting others first.This is a gentle reminder that caring for others begins with caring for ourselves. Prioritizing breast health is not a luxury, it is an essential act of self-care, strength, and awareness.Breast cancer accounts for 13.5% of all new cancer cases among Indian women and 10% of cancer-related deaths.1. And yet, an ICMR-supported community study found that breast self-examination awareness2 among women was below 1%. The disease is widespread, but the conversation around it remains limited, often entirely absent.The habit that can change thingsWhat if the most meaningful thing a woman could do for herself took less than ten minutes a month? Research from AIIMS Rishikesh found that after a structured educational program, breast cancer knowledge among women rose from 5% to 95% and 90% of participants were able to correctly perform a breast self-examination3. The takeaway is not just encouraging, rather transformative. Women, when given the right tools and information, act on them.A monthly breast self-examination is simply the practice of knowing your own body well enough to notice when something has changed. That awareness helps you stay more in tune with your health and recognize when to seek medical advice.Since 2019, SBI Life’s Thanks A Dot– a breast cancer awareness initiative has been working to put exactly that practice into the hands, quite literally, of women across India. The initiative is built on three pillars: making self-examination a regular habit, opening up conversations about breast health within homes and communities, and reinforcing that early detection is where outcomes truly turn. Besides this, the initiative carries a message that SBI Life, as an insurance provider, understands deeply that health preparedness and financial preparedness are inseparable. Knowing something early only helps if you are also in a position to act on it.The Hug of Life hot water bags transform the initiative into something you can hold in your hands. Designed around one of the most familiar objects in an Indian home, the hot water bag, it is reimagined from the ground up. It is a first-of-its-kind design aimed at making awareness more intuitive and accessible. Heat-responsive design on the bag changes color when filled with hot water, serving as a monthly reminder to self-examine. Seven days after the start of the menstrual cycle, when breast tissue is at its least dense, is the ideal time to self-examine. The Hug of Life fits into that window naturally, turning a moment of everyday comfort into something quietly purposeful. And should anything feel unfamiliar like a lump, a texture that seems different, any change that was not there before, the path forward is clear: reaching out to a doctor, without delay.When one woman tells anotherThe Hug of Life is, at its heart, a conversation starter. Breast health in India has long been a subject people hesitate to discuss; not only in medical settings, but also within families and among friends in everyday life. The kit changes that dynamic. It gives women something to point to, something to share, a reason to have a conversation that might not have happened otherwise.Change happens one conversation at a time. One woman who knows, telling another who doesn’t. That, in the end, is how a habit becomes a norm and a norm becomes protection.For more information, visit the website.References:
- Mehrotra, R., & Yadav, K. (2022). Breast cancer in India: Present scenario and the challenges ahead. World Journal of Clinical Oncology, 13(3), 209–218. https://doi.org/10.5306/wjco.v13.i3.209
- Sathishkumar, K., Chaturvedi, M., Das, P., Stephen, S., & Mathur, P. (2022). Cancer incidence estimates for 2022 & projection for 2025: Result from National Cancer Registry Programme, India. Indian Journal of Medical Research, 156(4–5), 598–607. PubMed Central https://doi.org/10.4103/ijmr.ijmr_1821_22
- (AIIMS Rishikesh) Dubashi, B., Jose, NK, Mallick, S., Singh, B., Tripathi, R., Devi, N., & Veeraiah, S. (2025). A protocol paper on the implementation of a health care model to improve the survival of breast cancer patients in India. Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology, 17. https://doi.org/10.1177/17588359251372832
Note: This should not be considered a substitute for medical advice. Please consult your treating physician for more details.Disclaimer: This article has been produced on behalf of SBI Life Insurance by Times Internet’s Spotlight team.
