India has made rapid strides in the health sector since independence. However, various eye opening data from NFHS clearly indicate that access to healthcare still remains a challenge.
While the health statistics of rural India continue to be poor, the health status and access to health for the poor in urban slum dwellers has surfaced to be equally deplorable and have less than 4% of government primary healthcare facilities.
Urban slum dwellers suffer from adverse health conditions owing to mainly two reasons –first the lack of education and thus lack of awareness; and second the unwillingness to lose a day’s wage in order to
reach the nearest medical facility. Healthcare for underprivileged, which is a desperate need, thus remains unaddressed.
The need of the hour is thus a two pronged approach – first to bring quality healthcare services to doorsteps of the needy and second to promote healthcare awareness and contemporary healthcare seeking behavior among the underprivileged.
In such a scenario a mobile healthcare services delivery system is the most practical mechanism. And in subscription to this view, Christina charitable trust has initiated the Smile on Wheels programme.
This is a unique mobile hospital programme that seeks to address problems of mobility, accessibility and availability of primary healthcare with a special focus on children and women, in urban slums and remote rural areas.
The Smile Foundation on Wheels programme has so far provided free healthcare services to more than 15,00children and families.
What We Did Last Year
54,835 people received healthcare services through 34 operational projects in 78 remote villages and slums
Over 70% of the total beneficiaries covered in the reporting period were women and children
More than 5300 school going children benefitted from School Health Programme
29 multi-speciality camps were conducted in underserved slums and remote rural areas, meeting the immediate healthcare needs of 3773 people