A group of people, each wearing a different brightly coloured T-shirt, and grouped together, standing, kneeling, and sitting in front of an old building.

Awareness Days to inspire action and celebrate progress

During March and April, we’re looking ahead to several awareness days. Are they important? We think so. They help to accelerate change and celebrate progress; a chance to champion inclusion and be a part of something bigger.

During March and April, we’re looking ahead to several awareness days. Are they important? We think so. They help to accelerate change and celebrate progress; a chance to champion inclusion and be a part of something bigger.

Coming up over the next couple of months we have:

  • Cerebral Palsy awareness month (March)
  • Young Carer’s Action Day (11 March)
  • Disabled Access Day (16 March)
  • World Down Syndrome Day (21 March)
  • Global Accessibility Awareness Day (21 March)
  • World Autism Awareness Day (2 April)
  • MS Awareness Week (20-26 April)

Let’s embrace these as opportunities to highlight important topics, provide fresh perspectives and raise knowledge.

We’d love to hear from you with any specific examples of how you’re driving action and change, and where you’ve seen results as you bring unity and inclusion within your communities. Your stories matter. By sharing them, we can spotlight the brilliant work already happening and inspire even more unity, understanding, and inclusion across our communities.

And if we need to use an awareness day or two as the hook that enables us to tell these stories to the wider world, then we’re fine with that.

Contact info@phab.org.uk to share your story.