Care comes to her
We bring screening and consultation into the village, not the other way around.
We are building the care that comes to her, village by village, camp by camp. This is who we are, how we work, and where we're starting from.
In rural India, distance, cost, and stigma quietly decide who gets care and who does not. A routine anemia check or a safe-pregnancy visit can mean a day of lost wages and a long trip many families cannot spare.
The gap shows up in the numbers. 57% of Indian women aged 15–49 are anemic, and roughly one in two young rural women still lacks access to hygienic menstrual products. These are not rare cases. They are everyday gaps that reach almost every village.
Source: NFHS-5, 2019–21We start with women because a woman's health carries a whole household, and because it is too often the first thing overlooked. When care reaches her early and close to home, everything downstream gets better.
We bring screening and consultation into the village, not the other way around.
We are new, and we won't pretend otherwise. We'd rather under-promise and let the work speak for itself.
Every woman is met as a capable person, never as a case or a statistic.
We work with panchayats, local volunteers, and nearby hospitals, so care stays rooted and lasts.
Every Jeevan Shobha camp runs under qualified medical supervision, supported by trained local volunteers. It is founded and guided by practicing medical professionals.
We have chosen, deliberately, not to build this around a single founder's name or photograph. Our team includes practicing doctors who give their time quietly, alongside their regular work. We would rather earn your trust through the care model, the credentials, and the work itself than through one person's story.
That is also why we lead with what we can point to: who supervises a camp, and how referrals happen.
We work with local partners and panchayats to choose a village, a date, and a safe, reachable space. Word goes out early so women can plan around work and family.
Qualified staff run free check-ups: anemia screening, blood pressure, safe-pregnancy guidance, and menstrual health support, with time to actually listen.
Anyone who needs more than a camp can offer is connected to a nearby hospital, and we track what happens next instead of losing them at the door.
After a camp we share how it went and what we learned, in plain language, so people can follow the work as it grows.
Every camp is run under qualified medical supervision, supported by trained local volunteers.
We're not going to promise glossy reports on day one. Right now this is a small effort, carried by practicing medical professionals giving their time. We'd rather under-promise and let the work show.
As we run our first camps and support grows, we'll share more, and we'll open up our accounts as the organisation is ready to.
To give a sense of scale, around ₹500 covers one woman's complete camp screening.
Fund the first camps, offer your time, or open a door in your district.
No spam. Just honest updates from each camp: what we did, who we reached, and what comes next.