Healthcare Where Roads Don't Reach

India’s villages are the heart of our country — but when it comes to healthcare, they’re often treated like the forgotten limb. A child in a city can get a blood test within 30 minutes. A child in a village might have to travel 30 km just to see a nurse. This gap doesn’t just cost time. It costs lives. Through our Gaon Gaon Swasthya campaign, Kamayani Foundation has set out to change that — one village at a time. Our mobile medical vans, rural health camps, and local health partnerships are reaching places where hospitals don’t exist and pharmacies are just painted signs with no real stock. This campaign isn't about short-term aid. It’s about building long-term access, trust, and awareness in areas that have been underserved for decades.

Medical Relief Is Not a Luxury — It’s a Right

Many villagers live with treatable conditions — anemia, infections, asthma, skin diseases — simply because diagnosis is delayed. What starts as a minor illness often snowballs into crisis due to distance, cost, and lack of information. Our campaign offers more than just pills. We offer presence. We conduct regular check-ups, distribute free medicines, refer serious cases to nearby government hospitals, and — most importantly — we listen. We take time to understand what people are really suffering from. Because behind every stomach ache could be months of malnutrition. Behind every cough, untreated pollution or trauma.

Our goal is not just to support weddings — but to change what weddings mean for poor families. We don’t celebrate excess. We celebrate respect. Every wedding supported under Samaan Se Vivaah is proof that when you remove the pressure of performance, love and dignity can truly shine.

  • Regular Health Camps Held in deep rural belts every month, offering screenings for women, children, and elders — with a focus on long-ignored issues like reproductive health and chronic fatigue.
  • Free Medicine Distribution Basic antibiotics, supplements, pain relief, and skin treatments are provided on-the-spot after doctor consultation — all verified by licensed professionals.
  • Health Awareness Workshops Villagers are taught symptoms of common illnesses, hygienic practices, and how to use government healthcare cards. Information is often more powerful than aid.