
Health
India is drawing global attention due to its deep political, economic and social transformations which have significantly improved the standard of living of its people. Unfortunately, this socioeconomic change is largely an urban phenomenon and rural population continues to suffer from economic deprivation and emerging health profile in rural areas is a cause for concern for stakeholders associated with healthcare in India.
Nearly 75% of healthcare infrastructure, medical personnel, and other resources are concentrated in urban locations where only 27% of the population exist. The rural population is impacted by contagious, infectious and waterborne diseases like typhoid, infectious, diarrhoea, measles, tuberculosis, whooping cough, amoebiasis, hepatitis, worm infestations, malaria, respiratory infections, pneumonia, and reproductive tract infections. Again, non-communicable diseases like blindness, cancer, mental disorder, diabetes, HIV/AIDS, hypertension, accidents, and injuries are also increasing.
Our Approach

Access to Hard Infrastructure
Set up classrooms in rural communities and training centres near hospitals for easy access.

Access to Quality Skilling
Build healthcare skills through seasoned trainers with a globally accepted curriculum.

Livelihood Generation
Train individuals to help their communities and earn a livelihood as a Medical Social Worker or healthcare professional.

Public Service
Upskill individuals in quality culture and patient safety practices vital for public service.

Tech-enabled Transparency
Track individual progress to instill accountability and improve existing medical standards.

Ecosystem Development
Create new avenues for improving system capacity, fostering partnerships, and developing telemedicine research.
With access to