Seva Dham Foundation's Healthcare Seva provides free medical camps, medicines, diagnostics and specialist consultations to rural and underprivileged communities — because good health is not a privilege, it is a right.
Six pillars of free healthcare — from monthly camps to eye surgeries to mental health support.
General physician consultations, blood pressure, sugar checks, and basic diagnostics — free for all. Held across villages, slums and urban poor clusters every month.
Monthly ProgramPartnered with specialist eye hospitals to provide free eye camps, reading glasses distribution and fully funded cataract surgeries for those who cannot afford them.
Specialist CampFree dental check-ups, extractions, fillings and oral hygiene education — especially for school children and elderly in underserved areas with no access to dentists.
Dental SevaA curated medicine bank stocks over 200 essential medicines distributed free at every camp and our centres. Your medicine donation directly reaches those who need it most.
Daily SevaAntenatal care, immunization drives, malnutrition screening, iron-folic acid distribution and skilled midwife training for safe motherhood in rural communities.
Women's HealthCounselling sessions, stress management workshops and awareness drives — because mental health is as important as physical health. All sessions confidential and free.
Mental Health| Date | Location | Type | Speciality | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 Jul 2026 | Mumbra, Thane | General Camp | GP + Dental | Upcoming |
| 12 Jul 2026 | Bhiwandi, Thane | Eye Camp | Ophthalmology | Upcoming |
| 20 Jul 2026 | Wardha, Vidarbha | Women's Health | Gynaecology + Child | Upcoming |
| 3 Aug 2026 | Nagpur Slums | General + Medicine | GP + Pathology | Upcoming |
| 15 Jun 2026 | Shahapur, Thane | Eye Camp | Ophthalmology | Completed |
| 1 Jun 2026 | Navi Mumbai | General Camp | GP + Dental + BP/Sugar | Completed |
To bring a medical camp to your village or community, contact us.
Location surveyed, volunteer doctors briefed, medicines stocked, publicity done in villages.
Mobile medical unit arrives with doctors, nurses, medicines and diagnostic equipment.
Every patient gets a consultation, BP/sugar check, prescription and free medicines — no fee.
Critical cases are tracked via WhatsApp. Referrals to specialists made at no cost to patient.
Nine programs taking healthcare beyond the camp — to mobile vans, nutrition gardens, mental health, digital tools and more.
Deploy mobile health vans covering 20 villages per region each month, focusing initially on North-East, Bihar, Bengal and Maharashtra. Each van offers telemedicine consultations and Ayurvedic care, with extended follow-up support for continuity of care.
Lease/acquire a van, staff it via a rotating roster of partner-hospital doctors and a permanent nurse/coordinator, and pre-announce the monthly village schedule through local panchayats.
Predictable scheduling builds patient trust and turnout; pairing telemedicine with Ayurveda widens the range of conditions addressed on a single visit.
Work with slum communities to convert 100 unused patches of land into kitchen/nutrition gardens, giving families direct access to fresh vegetables and improving household nutrition at low cost.
Identify unused community patches with the local ward office, provide seeds/compost starter kits, and assign a resident 'garden champion' per patch.
Locally-owned gardens are far more likely to be maintained than foundation-run plots, delivering a durable nutrition benefit.
Train approximately 1,000 teachers per year across India in mental health first-aid — covering crisis intervention techniques and how to recognise early warning signs in students — so schools become better equipped to support student wellbeing.
Run a one-day certified workshop per school cluster using a standard curriculum, with a follow-up refresher session after 6 months.
Trained teachers act as an early-warning layer in schools, where mental-health issues are otherwise rarely identified until they become severe.
Develop and launch a free mobile application offering a symptom checker and a clinic locator to connect users with the nearest available healthcare facility — particularly aimed at underserved communities.
Build a minimum-viable version first (symptom checker + clinic locator only) with a tech-for-good partner, pilot it in the mobile-van regions, then iterate based on feedback.
Starting lean avoids over-investment before user feedback validates which features communities actually use.
Offer holistic care blending spiritual healing therapies with daily health tips drawn from the Ayurvedic system — a complementary approach to conventional medicine for those seeking rounded wellness.
Pair each mobile health van visit with a short Ayurveda/spiritual-wellness session led by a partner Ayurvedacharya or the Spiritual Wellness team.
Combining physical and spiritual care reflects how many communities already understand health, improving acceptance and follow-through.
Create regular Yoga, Pranayam (breathing exercises) and fitness content developed with guidance from Ayurvedacharyas, making traditional wellness practices accessible to a wider audience.
Film short (2–5 min) Yoga/Pranayam routines with an Ayurvedacharya, releasing one new routine per week aligned to the content calendar.
Short, repeatable wellness videos are highly shareable and position the foundation as an everyday-useful resource, not only a crisis responder.
Produce a podcast bringing together health experts from across medical and wellness domains, with a special focus on highlighting the health challenges and solutions relevant to street families and other vulnerable groups.
Alternate episodes between clinical experts and first-person stories from street families, recorded during mobile-van visits where possible.
Mixing expert and lived-experience voices builds both credibility and emotional connection with listeners and potential donors.
Explore and work towards affordable health insurance schemes specifically designed for families living on the streets, who are typically excluded from formal insurance coverage.
Research existing government health-cover schemes (e.g., Ayushman Bharat) first to maximise enrolment before exploring any supplementary private cover.
Many eligible families are simply unenrolled in existing schemes, so enrolment drives can deliver large impact at minimal direct cost.
Run a public-education campaign on the dangers of antibiotic misuse and the growing problem of antibiotic resistance — encouraging responsible use of medication among the general public and healthcare providers alike.
Create simple multi-lingual posters/audio for clinics and mobile vans, and brief partner doctors to reinforce the message during consultations.
Frontline reinforcement at the point of prescription is far more effective than awareness content alone.
₹500 pays for medicines for 10 patients. ₹5,000 sponsors a full medical camp. Your donation gives someone a second chance at health.