Foundation for Social Care

Mobile Hospital Service

Advancing Rural Healthcare Through FSC’s Pioneering Outreach (1998–2001)

Introduction

The Mobile Hospital Service was launched by the Foundation for Social Care (FSC) in May 1998 to deliver quality healthcare to India’s most underserved communities. As an early prototype of mobile medical outreach, it bridged the critical healthcare gap in rural and peri-urban regions—long before such models became mainstream under national health missions.

Focus: Last-mile health connectivity, maternal care, infectious diseases, general checkups, and health education — reaching 4–5 villages per day with 70–80 patients served daily.

National Health Alignment

Impact Summary

Service Year Villages Covered Patients Benefited
May 1998 – Mar 199992829,066
Apr 1999 – Mar 200084328,744
Apr 2000 – Mar 2001146113,199
Apr 2001 (1 Month)128995
Total3,360+69,004+

Current Continuity

Though the original mobile van was decommissioned post-2001 due to wear and budget constraints, FSC has continued its outreach mandate through:

  • Free medical camps in rural & urban slums
  • Preventive health education through schools and mosques
  • Partnership with local volunteers and physicians
  • Integration of outreach with Hayat Hospital
Mobile Hospital in Action

Future Roadmap

“Healthcare must travel where roads go silent—this was the vision behind our Mobile Hospital Service. We stand ready to reignite this mission in service of national health goals.”

Original Management Committee