Hygiene & well-being

Our home and personal care brands can make a positive difference to people’s health and well-being. But achieving lasting improvements depends on people changing their everyday habits.

Lifebuoy campaign

The Issues

Every year over 3.5 million children die before the age of five because of diarrhoea and acute respiratory infections. One billion people lack safe drinking water. Most people, the world over, are affected by tooth decay and gum disease.

We are making a difference in all these areas – not just by providing products such as Lifebuoy soap and Signal/Pepsodent/Close Up toothpaste, but by encouraging people to improve their everyday hygiene habits.

Our approach

  • We make effective products that promote health and well-being – and, as in the case of Lifebuoy, have done for 100 years

  • We transform people's everyday habits through effective behaviour change campaigns

  • We work with partners, including governments, health agencies and non-profit groups, to achieve wider improvements in health and well-being.

Many of our brands, including Lifebuoy and Signal/Pepsodent/Close Up, have integrated health, hygiene and well-being into their mission and identity.

Our Global Health through Hygiene Programme works with our brands and partners such as the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, UNICEF and the World Bank, to improve our technical capability in the area of health and hygiene, particularly in evaluating behaviour change.

Global Handwashing Day

Lifebuoy worked with NGOs, governments and other companies to co-found the first-ever Global Handwashing Day, launched on 15 October 2008 in 75 countries around the world. Lifebuoy teams co-ordinated a range of handwashing-related activities in 23 countries, including Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, India, Indonesia, South Africa and Ghana.  In 2009, Global Handwashing Day activities were even more impactful, touching the lives of close to 5,000 school-aged children right here in the Caribbean.

Glowgerm

Lifebuoy’s 'glowgerm' demonstration shows that 'visibly clean' is not 'hygienically clean' by using ultra-violet light to show the dirt left behind on hands washed only with water.  In Trinidad, 4,000 primary school students were exposed to the 'glowgerm' demonstrations during Lifebuoy activities on Global Handwashing Day.

Now widely regarded as the best way of measuring handwashing behaviour, the technology has already been used in partnership with the Gates Foundation and the World Bank in Bangladesh, and with UNICEF in Uganda.

Sharing our marketing skills

The In Safe Hands programme, developed by Lifebuoy and our Marketing Academy, teaches marketing skills to public sector health professionals to help them develop effective local handwashing and behaviour change campaigns. To date it has reached nearly 300 professionals in East Africa, Vietnam and Indonesia.

Improving oral health

Tooth decay and gum disease are one of today's most common ailments, often causing low self-confidence too. Around the world, over 1 billion people do not brush their teeth with a fluoridated toothpaste at all, while over 2 billion do not brush twice a day. In developing countries, 90% of dental caries remain untreated.

Signal/Pepsodent/Close Up's mission is to improve oral health through school-based oral hygiene programmes. Every year these programmes reach more than 4 million children, and by extension their families, with a message to brush day and night using fluoride toothpaste. Impact is measured using the same smart-sensor technology we use to assess rates of handwashing with soap.

This mission is at the heart of our partnership with the FDI World Dental Federation which now covers 40 countries.

Unilever employees regularly contribute oral-health research to external journals, for instance, presenting papers on behaviour change at the FDI Annual World Dental Congress in Stockholm in 2008.

Enhancing self-esteem & well-being

Many of our brands help people feel good and look good every day, which can enhance both physical and emotional well-being. Some have dedicated campaigns on empowering and raising the self-esteem of women.

Dove Self-Esteem Fund

Dove's Campaign for Real Beauty aims to improve self-esteem among young people by challenging traditional beauty stereotypes. Through activities such as workshops for schools and youth groups, Dove's Self-Esteem Fund has already reached 3.5 million young people, and aims to reach 1.5 million more by 2010. 

In the Caribbean, Dove Self-Esteem programmes have touched the lives of 18,000 young girls in Puerto Rico and the programme continues to positively contribute to young people in the region during their formative years.

Nutrition

We continue to innovate and enhance the nutritional quality of our foods portfolio. And through communications with consumers, we can encourage changes in everyday behavior, resulting in healthier lifestyles and improved diets. The Choices programme is a global initiative that is making a positive impact on consumer nutrition and health around the world.

Related Links

More on Dove's self-esteem fund

More on Choices

More on Global Handwashing Day activities