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When Fashion Becomes a Force for Health: Suta Joins Sanjeevani's Pink Tag Project for Breast Cancer Awareness

When Fashion Becomes a Force for Health: Suta Joins Sanjeevani's Pink Tag Project for Breast Cancer Awareness

Feb 10, 2026

BusinessWire India
Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], February 10: In a village outside Delhi, a woman notices a Pink Tag stitched inside her blouse- next to the wash-care label. It gently reminds her how to check herself with simple visuals, no alarms, no fear, just awareness. This is how the Federal Bank Hormis Memorial Foundation | Network 18 Sanjeevani - Pink Tag Project was born from rural India, is being amplified by local tailors and community trust. The ambitious initiative is now entering the fashion mainstream through Suta- the homegrown D2C brand that's been redefining what the saree means to the modern Indian woman. In this moment, tradition meets contemporary purpose. A garment becomes a carrier of care, and the fashion industry takes a step into nation-building.
Watch the film here: Sanjeevani x Suta | Pink Tag Project
In India, every four minutes a woman is diagnosed with breast cancer. Over 70% are detected late. Women don't screen because they have no time- no time for themselves. Between household work, earning livelihoods, and caring for families, self-care is a luxury they cannot afford. The Pink Tag Project began with a simple observation: women have one moment alone each day. When they get dressed. Stitched into clothing, the Pink Tag carries self-examination steps. A behavioral nudge embedded in a moment that already belongs to her. Rural tailors, volunteers, trusted voices, made it real.
Tradition Meets Contemporary Purpose
Suta entered Indian fashion with a mission: to reclaim the saree for the modern woman. In a market where tradition felt frozen in nostalgia, Suta brought fresh energy, cultural confidence, and design innovation. Now, Suta integrates the Pink Tag into its blouses that are no longer just identity, they become a carrier of care. A reminder that a woman's health matters as much as her responsibilities to others.
From Grassroots to Industry Blueprint
By stitching the Pink Tag into Suta blouses, right next to the wash-care label, the brand demonstrates a blueprint for how fashion companies can embed social purpose into product design and corporate philosophy. This tangible integration creates a replicable model for the broader apparel industry to adopt. The intervention scales from rural communities to mainstream fashion. A behavioural change nudge, once tested by local tailors, is now manufactured at scale by Suta. This convergence of community insight, industry participation, and market innovation creates the conditions for systemic health behaviour change.
Sujata Biswas, Co-founder, Suta, said, "At Suta, we understand that the garments women wear carry meaning beyond purchase. They carry identity, confidence, and now- care. When we learned about the Pink Tag, we saw something we couldn't ignore: an opportunity to use the trust women place in us for something that matters more. If a blouse can remind a woman that her health deserves attention, then fashion becomes a force for nation-building."
Taniya Biswas, Co-founder, Suta, added, "The dressing moment is sacred- it's when a woman is truly alone with herself. Placing the Pink Tag there felt inevitable. We're not instructing. We're simply being present in a moment that already belongs to her, reminding her that she matters."
Siddharth Saini, COO, News18 Studios, added, " Sanjeevani's scale across News18's broadcast network and digital platforms has ensured that vital health information reaches every segment of Indian society--from the nation's most influential audiences to underserved regions where lack of awareness still hinders early action and healthier outcomes. The Pink Tag shows how media can move beyond communication to drive measurable behavioural change. Designed as a simple, repeatable nudge, it reaches women at moments where traditional media influence ends, embedding awareness into the rhythms of daily life. Our partnership with Suta strengthens this impact by extending the intervention to retail touchpoints and social engagement. Today, the initiative operates at true scale, combining national reach with sustained, personal reinforcement and this is how we believe insight-led innovation delivers real-world results and builds systemic, long-term change."
Speaking about Suta coming on board, MVS Murthy, Chief Marketing Officer, Federal Bank, "The Pink Tag was always designed to scale beyond any single campaign. Suta's partnership proves that the real barrier to widespread adoption isn't innovation or resources- it is belief. It's the willingness of brands to align commercial success with social purpose. With Suta, we're not just launching a collaboration. We're building a blueprint for how India's fashion industry can become a partner in public health. This is nation-building through business."
What Happens Next
The Pink Tag is now stitched into Suta garments. This partnership extends an invitation to the apparel industry to adopt similar models. The D2C ecosystem, manufacturers, and policy circles are observing how scale and impact intersect. A tag becomes a daily reminder. That reminder, repeated across millions of wardrobes, creates sustained behavior change. Suta has established a precedent for how brands can drive social impact at scale.
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