Contribute

Contributing can mean more than giving money. Consider volunteering!

Monetary Contributions

From India

If you are in India, you can send checks to our mailing address:
P.O. Box 39
Bilaspur - 495 001
Chhattisgarh, India

From Abroad

If you wish to make a donation from abroad, you can wire your contribution to the following account.

Beneficiary CustomerJan Swasythya Sahyog
Beneficiary Customer Account Number1400 1010 95028
Beneficiary Bank (name)Bank of Rajasthan
Beneficiary Bank Address82 Janpath, New Delhi - 110001
Swift Code Beneficiary BankBRAJINBBOSD
Correspondent Bank (Send through bank) of Beneficiary Bank (name; town; country) Wachovia Bank NA New York
Beneficiary Bank Account Number2000-193003679
Swift Code Correspondent BankPNBPUS3NNYC

Volunteering

With an ever-increasing patient load, and the provision of all levels of clinical services, public health, and even sponsorship of agricultural development, the medical staff of JSS is severely overtaxed and short-staffed in clinical, research, public health initiatives and supporting specialty roles.

The hope is that volunteers may be found to come to Ganiyari for periods ranging from three months to two years. Each will make an enormous difference in the lives of severely impoverished villagers and have the experience of a lifetime working with world-class physician and non-physician professionals and allied staff.

Recently, Jonathan Fine interviewed Yogesh Jain, one of the founding physicians of JSS, on the volunteer professional staff that JSS urgently needs to recruit

Interview: Yogesh Jain on The Need for Volunteers

We need physicians with a sensitivity to injustice and inequality, but technically trained and not prisoners of their own specialization, to work here with flexibility for periods that range from 3 months to 2 years, preferably coming from more general specialties like medicine, pediatrics, surgery or obstetrics, but also orthopedics, eye. Other specialists who are open to see problems that don't belong to their own specialization are also welcome.

Besides this, the people we require are those keen on working in the community, trying to support programs that are already running, like in nutrition or women's health, or in trying to understand the reasons for poor access and poor quality in health care or interested in training, primary health care workers in the community. These people should know at least one Indian language.

People who have skills in making films or in documentation would also be useful but that would require advanced planning as to what they would do, i.e. reconnaissance. I am sure that people who are keen on working with children would be very welcome, again if they speak an Indian language.

You haven't mentioned pharmacy, and lab.

Other clinical skills would also be of use. Nurses who are trainers, laboratory technicians who like working in peripheral laboratories (e.g. the lab here at JSS in Ganiyari) and people who would like to learn and teach in other paramedical fields, either to support and train technicians who are here or to train technicians elsewhere. We need an army of trainers. There is a huge unmet need for training groups who work with the disadvantaged and don't have anybody to support them.

What about administrators?

I am not terribly clear how administrators who come for a short duration will help but setting up systems by implementing them, and by being part of one, might leave lasting changes in how our operations are run. But this will have to be fleshed out.

What would the minimum period be for such volunteer service?

A minimum of six months or maybe even one year.

What about mental health professionals?

Some one would have to be here for two years at least and must know Hindi... an Indian-American. One year also is fine. That could result in a lasting change here. Someone could come and set it up. People who are starting new things, at least for one year.

If you, or any colleague, might be interested in volunteering, please write to us at . Also, we will appreciate your forwarding this message to others. Lack of knowledge of an Indian language should not discourage applicants. Individual assessments will be made of how best to utilize each person's skills.

- Yogesh Jain 03 February 2010