Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

AIA Insurance launches ‘Suwa Walan’ to drive breast cancer awareness

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AIA Insurance has launched an innovative physical and digital campaign named ‘AIA Suwa Walan’, to drive education and awareness about breast cancer among Sri Lankan women.

Breast cancer is one of the most common forms of cancer diagnosed in women globally. In Sri Lanka alone, it accounts for 27 percent of cancers in women, with 14 new cases reported daily.

However, it is easily treatable and curable, if detected early. However, many Sri Lankan women hesitate to undergo regular checkups and screenings like mammograph­y tests. This is due to multiple reasons, ranging from the taboo associated with cancer, to safety concerns and misconcept­ions about the cost, as well as the pain associated with testing, and cultural stigmas around women’s health and receiving treatment from male doctors.

In response to this need for culturally sensitive, proactive health practices and greater awareness around breast cancer, AIA Insurance, in collaborat­ion with the Cancer Society of Sri Lanka, devised Suwa Walan – a unique awareness campaign that takes inspiratio­n from timeless Sri Lankan art, and a particular natural habit for Sri Lankan women, to promote a message of awareness and encourage regular selfexamin­ation.

All around Sri Lanka, women buy clay pots (walan) for cooking. When doing so, they often assess the durability of these walan by checking the pot, feeling it for cracks, discoloura­tion, lumps or any other signs that the pot may not be usable. Interestin­gly, this age-old custom bears a striking parallel to self-examinatio­ns for breast cancer, a practice where women regularly check themselves for symptoms of breast cancer like difference­s in size and shape, discoloura­tion, and lumps.

The AIA Suwa Walan campaign utilises the clay pot as a tool to promote self-examinatio­n at home through the distributi­on of custom clay pots embedded with a handmade lump to symbolise breast cancer. Each AIA Suwa Walan clay pot also features illustrati­ons depicting five simple steps for self-examinatio­n at home, designed in an art style that takes inspiratio­n from some of Sri Lanka’s most famous cultural art.

These pots, with their artistical­ly engaging guides, give women easy-to-follow instructio­ns on how to perform self-checks effectivel­y. By integratin­g health education with a familiar cultural practice, AIA Insurance aims to make breast cancer awareness more accessible and relatable to Sri Lankan women.

As part of the campaign, AIA Insurance has partnered with the Cancer Society in Sri Lanka to conduct activation­s across the country and further drive home the importance of taking steps to proactivel­y manage breast cancer. These activation­s feature detailed demonstrat­ions on breast cancer, self-checks, and guidance on further steps in case any anomalies are detected.

AIA Suwa Walan also drives breast cancer awareness online with a video on the underlying message of AIA Suwa Walan crafted for social media, with AIA Insurance sponsoring some breast cancer physical screening tests for women in need based on the number of shares the video receives.

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