As a consumer, deciding to living greener can not only help our planet but also reduce hygiene inequality and create greater health equity.
Most major hygiene product suppliers prioritize product convenience over affordability, leaving low-income communities vulnerable when it comes to hygiene security. But that can change when we all change how we buy, consume and interact with our hygiene products.
Our eco friendly laundry detergent sheets and other zero water products help to reduce greenhouse gases and make green living easier.
Sirius Wheaton of Amherst College addresses the injustices facing the Black student population and how Generation Conscious is working to give low-income students access to hygiene products like detergent sheets and toothpaste tablets.
Isabella Durcan of Wesleyan expounds how Generation Conscious is a adding a huge boost to the student hygiene equity and morale with their laundry detergent sheets, water refill stations, and more!
Clare Brennan of Wesleyan explains how Generation Conscious is doing intersectionality work by bringing sustainable hygiene products like laundry detergent sheets to campus.
Emily Warden is a UPenn student fighting to eradicate hygiene inequities and help alleviate the enormous environmental burden marginalized populations face when waste treatment plants are built in their communities. Learn more about how Generation Conscious is assisting in this fight.
Daniel Arizmendi of Amherst College details how Generation Conscious’s plastic-free, waste-free hygiene products are bringing pride and health equity to campus.
As Director of the First Generation Low Income Student Advisory Board at Wesleyan, Grabiela Harris expresses her joy and love of Generation Conscious and their hygiene equity activism on campus.
Johanna Hattan of Connecticut College gives her first-hand account of the successful partnership between Generation Conscious and the Student Government Body in bringing sustainable, waste-free, water-free hygiene products to over 1,000 students!