Click the link below to read a status paper written by Yogesh Jain, Raman Kataria, Sushil Patil, Suhas Kadam, Anju Kataria, Rachna Jain, Ravindra Kurbude & Sharayu Shinde and published in Indian Council of Medical Journal.
- 29th May 2016
सत्य परेशान हो सकता है पराजित नहीं
- 16th August 2018
People with tuberculosis falling through the cracks
- 1st February 2017
Poverty Calculus
- 11th February 2017
Medico Friend Circle Meeting Focuses on Chronic Disease of the Poor
- 12th February 2017
Health Stories from Rural India – A review of Atlas of Rural Health in The Hindu ePaper
- 12th November 2021
Stories of impact: Phulwaris of Anuppur
- 16th August 2018
People with tuberculosis falling through the cracks
- 13th August 2018
Sustaining for-profit emergency healthcare services in low resource areas
- 13th August 2018
Drug-resistant tuberculosis: is India ready for the challenge?
- 24th July 2018
Predictors of tuberculosis treatment outcomes among a retrospective cohort in rural, Central India
- 243103 +00002015-05-01T03:25:14+00:00312015b+00:00Fri, 01 May 2015 03:25:14 +0000 2009
Are we getting poorer?
- 253103 May+00:00bFri, 01 May 2015 03:25:14 +0000000000amFri, 01 May 2015 03:25:14 +000015 2015
Tuberculosis And Undernutrion : A Tale of Twin Problems
- 11431 Mayam15 2015
Burden & pattern of illnesses among the tribal communities in central India
- 153103 st+00:00p31+00:0005b+00:00Fri, 01 May 2015 03:25:14 +0000 2015
The Natural Attorneys of the Electronic Medical Record
- 173103 st+00:00p31+00:0005b+00:00Fri, 01 May 2015 03:25:14 +0000 2015
Why a snakebite victim in an indian village won’t walk through a door
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ABOUT
Jan Swasthya Sahyog (JSS) was established in 2000 by a group of socially conscious health and allied professionals, many of whom underwent training together at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi. Not satisfied with a techno-centric, hospital-based vision of tertiary healthcare, the group decided to base itself in a rural area and evolve a people-centric, community-based model of primary healthcare. The empowerment of village communities to prevent and treat illness has been central to the work of JSS.
Working in rural India in collaboration with the poor as well as with governments and voluntary organizations, Jan Swasthya Sahyog strives to be part of the solution to the vast unaddressed problems of Rural Health.