Adani Foundation, Anushkaa Foundation partner to support over 10,000 children with clubfoot across five states
Kanpur, June 3
More than 10,000 children affected by clubfoot across five states are set to benefit from a new partnership between the Adani Foundation, the social welfare and development arm of the Adani Group, and the Anushkaa Foundation, a specialised non-profit focused on eliminating clubfoot through public health partnerships.
Announced on World Clubfoot Day, the three-year initiative will expand access to treatment, strengthen public health systems and improve long-term care across 61 districts in Madhya Pradesh, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra and Himachal Pradesh.
The partnership was formally launched at Manyavar Kanshiram Samyukth Chikitsalay and Trauma Centre, Kanpur, one of Uttar Pradesh's important public healthcare institutions. Uttar Pradesh carries one of the highest clubfoot burdens in India, with an estimated 6,000 children born with the condition every year. As one of the state's largest districts, Kanpur reflects both the scale of the challenge and the opportunity to improve access to timely treatment.
Clubfoot is a congenital condition in which one or both feet are turned inward at birth, affecting nearly one in every 800 newborns. While it can be effectively corrected through the globally recognised Ponseti method, many children in underserved communities still miss timely treatment, limiting their mobility, confidence and quality of life.
Building on the Anushkaa Foundation's clubfoot programme, the initiative will support more than 10,000 children over three years through a model combining community outreach, clinical care, capacity building and family support, a release said.
Implemented in partnership with the National Health Mission (NHM), the programme will strengthen early identification and referral, expand access to treatment and build clinical capacity through the public healthcare network.
The programme will support 67 clubfoot clinics across 61 districts in five states, strengthening the capabilities of 51 healthcare professionals, and sensitising more than 30,000 frontline health workers to improve early detection and referral.
Dr Priti Adani, Chairperson, Adani Foundation, said that no child should be held back by a condition like clubfoot that is treatable when identified early.
"Every child deserves the opportunity to move, learn, play, and participate fully in life. Creating opportunities for specially abled individuals has long been central to the Adani Foundation's philosophy, and this partnership reflects that commitment. As the Anushkaa Foundation works towards a future free from clubfoot, we are honoured to advance that mission. Together, we aim to enable more children to live with dignity, independence and the opportunity to realise their full potential," she said.
Deepak Premnarayen, Founder, Anushkaa Foundation, said clubfoot is one of the most treatable childhood disabilities, yet thousands of children still miss timely care every year.
"This partnership with the Adani Foundation will help expand access to quality treatment across 61 districts in five states while strengthening systems for early diagnosis and intervention. Together, we can ensure that a treatable condition does not become a lifelong barrier to mobility and opportunity."
India records an estimated 33,000 children born with clubfoot every year, with nearly 12,000 of these births occurring across the five states covered under this programme. By expanding access to treatment, strengthening referral pathways and supporting families through the treatment journey, the initiative seeks to address a significant share of the country's clubfoot burden through sustainable public health systems.
As the Adani Foundation approaches its 30th anniversary on August 11, the initiative reflects its continued commitment to community-centred development, the release said. Working across 22 states and reaching more than 13.3 million beneficiaries annually, the Foundation's programmes span healthcare, education, sustainable livelihoods, climate resilience and community development.
Founded by the Premnarayen family and inspired by lived experience, the Anushkaa Foundation is a specialised non-profit working to eliminate clubfoot through public health partnerships, capacity building and family-centred care, the release said.
The organisation currently supports clubfoot treatment programmes across 165 districts in 13 states and has enabled care for more than 26,000 children. Today, one in six children born with clubfoot in India receives treatment through an Anushkaa-supported clinic, the release added.
— ANI
Reader Comments
Good initiative by Adani Foundation. I just wish they would publicise these CSR activities more aggressively so that the common man knows about them. There's so much negativity around big corporates, but this shows they do contribute to society. My cousin's child was born with clubfoot and early treatment made all the difference. 🙏
I've worked in public health in India, and clubfoot is one of the most neglected yet treatable conditions. The number—33,000 children every year—is staggering. This partnership with NHM is crucial because government systems can sustain these clinics long-term. Hope they track outcomes rigorously; numbers treated is one thing, but how many walk normally matters more.
Finally some good news amidst all the chaos! Clubfoot correction is literally a miracle when done on time—my neighbour's son had it and now he runs around like any other child. But the key is early detection at birth itself. Our hospitals need to make this a mandatory check. Also, kudos to Anushkaa Foundation for their grassroots work. 💯
Impressive scale—67 clinics across 61 districts in five states. But I've seen how these government hospital partnerships work; often the specialised staff is transferred or not available. Hope the training of 51 health professionals and sensitisation of 30,000 frontline workers is sustained. Otherwise it becomes just another photo-op. Still, better than doing nothing.
This is what CSR should look like—addressing a specific, measurable health issue with a proven solution. The Ponseti method costs almost nothing compared to surgery. As
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