This is the multi-page printable view of this section. Click here to print.

Return to the regular view of this page.

WARA DharmaCareNet

DharmaCareNet is WARA’s community infrastructure network that enables women-led local centers to deliver healthcare access, caregiving services, training, and wellness programs. It acts as the last-mile distribution layer connecting all CareNets into a single, scalable system.

One Center. All Care Services. Built for Scale.

What is DharmaCareNet

DharmaCareNet is WARA’s community infrastructure network that serves as the last-mile delivery system for all care services.

Each DharmaCareNet center is:

  • Operated by a local woman entrepreneur
  • Connected to the WARA Care System
  • Designed to deliver multiple care services from one location

It is not just a center - it is a complete care distribution point.


Why DharmaCareNet Exists

Across India:

  • Healthcare access is fragmented
  • Care services are not locally available
  • Infrastructure exists but is underutilized
  • Families depend on distant hospitals

At the same time:

  • Local women need livelihood opportunities
  • Communities need accessible care
  • Systems exist but are not connected

The problem is not availability - it is integration.


The WARA Approach

DharmaCareNet solves this by creating:

A Single Local Center That Can Deliver

  • Home care coordination
  • Health consultation access
  • Diagnostics coordination
  • Recovery and wellness programs
  • Emergency response support
  • Caregiver training

One center connects all CareNets into a working system.


Who Operates DharmaCareNet

Each center is operated by a:

Women Micro-Entrepreneur

Typically:

  • Experienced caregiver (HomeCareNet / ElderCareNet)
  • Trained through EduCareNet
  • Or a local motivated entrepreneur

She becomes:

  • Care coordinator
  • Health access facilitator
  • Community service provider

Empowering women to run care systems locally.


How DharmaCareNet Works


Step 1: Local Center Setup

  • Small space (home / rented / community space)
  • Basic equipment and digital access
  • Connected to WARA system

Step 2: Multi-Service Activation

The center begins offering:

  • Patient intake and consultation support
  • Diagnostics coordination
  • Caregiver deployment
  • Wellness sessions

Step 3: Network Integration

The center connects with:

  • Doctors (HealthCareNet)
  • Caregivers (HomeCareNet)
  • Emergency responders (ElderCareNet)
  • Trainers (EduCareNet)
  • Therapists (AyushCareNet)

Step 4: Daily Operations

The operator:

  • Coordinates patients
  • Tracks care via Care Ledger
  • Manages local services
  • Supports families

The system runs locally but stays connected globally.


What Services a DharmaCareNet Center Delivers


Healthcare Access

  • Primary consultation support
  • Telemedicine coordination
  • Hospital referrals

Care Services

  • Home caregiver deployment
  • Elder monitoring coordination
  • Recovery support

Diagnostics & Pharmacy Coordination

  • Sample collection scheduling
  • Report handling
  • Medicine coordination

Wellness & Rehabilitation

  • Yoga sessions
  • Physiotherapy coordination
  • Lifestyle programs

Community Services

  • Health awareness programs
  • Elder engagement
  • Preventive wellness

It becomes the health and care hub of the community.


Why This Model Works


Asset-Light Expansion

  • No heavy infrastructure needed
  • Uses local spaces
  • Scales rapidly

Women-Led Entrepreneurship

  • Creates local livelihoods
  • Builds ownership
  • Improves trust

Integrated System

  • All services connected
  • No fragmentation
  • Better outcomes

Scale comes from systems, not buildings.


What DharmaCareNet Does NOT Do

  • Does not operate hospitals
  • Does not replace doctors
  • Does not provide complex medical procedures

It focuses on:

👉 Access, coordination, and delivery


Long-Term Vision

DharmaCareNet aims to become:

  • India’s largest community care infrastructure network
  • A women-led distributed healthcare system
  • The last-mile layer connecting all care services

Every locality can have a care center.


Final Thought

Care should not depend on distance, availability, or chance.

DharmaCareNet brings structured, reliable care closer to every community.


Get Started

👉 [Partner With WARA]

1 - Community Care Centers

Community Care Centers under DharmaCareNet are women-led local hubs that act as last-mile access points for healthcare, caregiving, diagnostics coordination, and wellness services. They connect communities to the WARA Care System through a simple, scalable setup.

Local Presence. System-Driven Care.

What is a Community Care Center

A Community Care Center is a locally operated service hub that connects people to WARA’s complete care ecosystem.

It is:

  • Small in size
  • Simple in setup
  • Powerful in capability

One small center can deliver multiple care services.


Why Community Centers are Needed

In many areas:

  • Hospitals are far
  • Doctors are not easily available
  • Care services are unorganized
  • Families lack guidance

At the same time:

  • Local spaces are available
  • People need nearby support
  • Demand for care is growing

The gap is not infrastructure - it is access and coordination.


The Role of a Community Center

Each center acts as:

A Local Access Point

  • Entry point for healthcare services
  • First contact for patients and families

A Coordination Hub

  • Connects patients to doctors
  • Coordinates caregivers and services

A Monitoring Node

  • Tracks care activities
  • Maintains records through Care Ledger

A Community Engagement Space

  • Runs wellness programs
  • Supports elderly engagement

It connects people to the entire WARA network.


Who Runs the Center

Each center is operated by a:

Women Care Entrepreneur

She is:

  • Trained through EduCareNet
  • Experienced in caregiving or coordination
  • Responsible for daily operations

Her role includes:

  • Patient coordination
  • Service delivery management
  • Community engagement

One trained woman can run a complete care node.


What a Community Center Provides


Healthcare Access

  • Patient registration
  • Consultation coordination
  • Telemedicine support

Diagnostics Coordination

  • Sample collection scheduling
  • Lab coordination
  • Report handling

Care Services

  • Home caregiver deployment
  • ElderCareNet coordination
  • Recovery support

Wellness & Programs

  • Yoga sessions
  • Physiotherapy coordination
  • Preventive wellness

Community Services

  • Health awareness sessions
  • Elder engagement activities
  • Local support programs

It becomes the first point of contact for all care needs.


Minimum Setup Requirements

A Community Center can be started with:


Space

  • Small room (home / rented / community space)
  • Clean and accessible

Basic Equipment

  • Table and seating
  • Basic vitals monitoring tools
  • Mobile / computer device

Digital Access

  • Internet connectivity
  • Access to WARA system
  • Care Ledger integration

No large investment required.


Daily Activities at the Center

A typical day may include:

  • Patient consultations (morning)
  • Diagnostics coordination
  • Caregiver assignments
  • Follow-ups and reporting
  • Evening wellness sessions

The center operates as a full-day service node.


How It Connects to WARA Network

The center integrates with:

  • HomeCareNet → caregiver deployment
  • ElderCareNet → monitoring and emergency
  • HealthCareNet → doctor and diagnostics
  • AyushCareNet → recovery and wellness
  • EduCareNet → training and recruitment

One center connects all systems together.


Why This Model Works


Low Cost

  • Minimal setup
  • Local resources

High Impact

  • Multiple services from one place
  • Direct community benefit

Scalable

  • Easy to replicate
  • Can expand across regions

Growth happens through replication.


What This Center Does NOT Do

  • Does not perform surgeries
  • Does not act as a hospital
  • Does not replace doctors

It focuses on:

👉 Access, coordination, and local delivery


Long-Term Role

Over time, Community Centers become:

  • Trusted local health points
  • Care coordination hubs
  • Training and employment nodes

Every center strengthens the network.


Final Thought

Care should begin close to home.

Community Care Centers bring structured care within reach of every neighborhood.


Get Started

👉 [Partner With WARA]

2 - Multi-Service Delivery Model

Multi-Service Delivery under DharmaCareNet enables a single community center to deliver healthcare access, caregiving, diagnostics coordination, wellness, and emergency support. It integrates all WARA CareNets into one structured, efficient, and scalable system.

One Center. Multiple Services. One System.

What is Multi-Service Delivery

Multi-Service Delivery is the ability of a single DharmaCareNet center to deliver multiple care services together, instead of operating as isolated services.

It integrates:

  • Healthcare access
  • Caregiver services
  • Diagnostics coordination
  • Recovery and wellness
  • Emergency coordination

One location handles the entire care journey.


Why This Model is Important

Traditional systems are fragmented:

  • Doctors, labs, caregivers, and hospitals operate separately
  • Patients move between multiple providers
  • Coordination is weak
  • Time and cost increase

Fragmentation creates delay, confusion, and risk.


The WARA Approach

WARA connects all services into a single coordinated system.

At one center:

  • Patients enter the system
  • Services are coordinated
  • Care is tracked
  • Outcomes are managed

Integration replaces fragmentation.


How Multi-Service Delivery Works


Step 1: Single Entry Point

A patient visits the Community Center:

  • Shares symptoms or needs
  • Gets registered in the system

Step 2: Service Routing

Based on need, the center coordinates:

  • Doctor consultation
  • Diagnostics
  • Caregiver support
  • Recovery programs

Step 3: Execution Across Networks

Services are delivered through:

  • HomeCareNet → in-home care
  • HealthCareNet → clinical support
  • AyushCareNet → recovery and wellness
  • ElderCareNet → monitoring and coordination

Step 4: Continuous Tracking

  • All activities recorded in Care Ledger
  • Progress monitored
  • Updates shared

Step 5: Ongoing Support

  • Follow-ups managed
  • Adjustments made
  • Long-term care supported

Care becomes continuous, not episodic.


Services Delivered from One Center


Healthcare Access

  • Primary consultation
  • Telemedicine
  • Specialist referrals

Diagnostics Coordination

  • Sample collection scheduling
  • Report tracking
  • Lab integration

Caregiver Deployment

  • Home care services
  • Elder care coordination

Recovery & Wellness

  • Physiotherapy
  • Yoga programs
  • Rehabilitation plans

Emergency Coordination

  • Alert response
  • Ambulance coordination
  • Hospital linkage

All services flow through one system.


Benefits of Multi-Service Delivery


For Patients

  • One place for all needs
  • Reduced travel and effort
  • Faster service coordination

For Families

  • Clear communication
  • Better visibility
  • Reduced stress

For Operators

  • Multiple revenue streams
  • Efficient operations
  • Strong community role

Efficiency improves outcomes.


Why It Scales


Standardized Model

  • Same structure across locations
  • Easy replication

Asset-Light Setup

  • No need for multiple facilities
  • One center delivers all services

Network Integration

  • Connected to larger ecosystem
  • Expands capability without expansion cost

Scale comes from system design.


What This Model Does NOT Do

  • Does not replace hospitals
  • Does not centralize all services physically
  • Does not create complexity

It simplifies care through:

👉 Coordination and integration


Real-Life Example

A patient with chronic condition:

  1. Visits center
  2. Gets doctor consultation
  3. Completes diagnostic tests
  4. Receives home caregiver
  5. Follows lifestyle program
  6. Monitored continuously

Entire journey managed through one system.


Long-Term Impact

Multi-Service Delivery enables:

  • Better care continuity
  • Faster decision-making
  • Improved health outcomes
  • Sustainable operations

One system improves the entire care experience.


Final Thought

Care should not be scattered across systems.

Multi-Service Delivery brings everything together into one coordinated flow.


Get Started

👉 [Partner With WARA]

3 - Local Partnerships

Local Partnerships under DharmaCareNet enable collaboration with hospitals, diagnostic labs, ambulance providers, pharmacies, and community organizations to deliver coordinated and reliable care services through a connected network.

Connected Locally. Coordinated Systemically.

What are Local Partnerships

Local Partnerships are the external service connections that enable each DharmaCareNet center to deliver complete care without owning all infrastructure.

These include:

  • Hospitals
  • Diagnostic labs
  • Ambulance providers
  • Pharmacies
  • Community organizations

WARA does not replace these services - it connects and coordinates them.


Why Partnerships are Essential

No single center can provide everything.

Challenges without partnerships:

  • Limited service capability
  • Delayed care
  • Fragmented coordination
  • Increased cost

Care becomes effective when systems work together.


The WARA Approach

WARA builds a structured partner network around each center.

Each partner:

  • Provides a specific service
  • Follows defined coordination protocols
  • Integrates with the WARA system

Local delivery. Central coordination.


Types of Local Partners


Hospitals

  • Admission support
  • Treatment and procedures
  • Emergency handling

Diagnostic Labs

  • Sample collection
  • Testing and reports
  • Scheduled routes and pickups

Ambulance Providers

  • Emergency transport
  • Pre-coordinated response
  • Fast activation

Pharmacies

  • Medicine availability
  • Prescription fulfillment
  • Local delivery support

Community Organizations

  • Space support
  • Awareness programs
  • Local engagement

Each partner strengthens the system.


How Partnerships Work


Step 1: Partner Identification

  • Local service providers mapped
  • Capability and reliability assessed

Step 2: Onboarding

  • Basic agreement and understanding
  • Service scope defined
  • Communication flow established

Step 3: Integration

  • Linked to DharmaCareNet center
  • Connected to WARA workflows
  • Aligned with protocols

Step 4: Service Execution

  • Requests routed through system
  • Partners deliver services
  • Coordination managed centrally

Step 5: Monitoring

  • Performance tracked
  • Feedback recorded
  • Improvements implemented

Partnerships operate within a structured system.


Example Flow

A patient needs diagnostics:

  1. Center identifies requirement
  2. Lab partner scheduled
  3. Sample collected via route
  4. Report shared digitally
  5. Doctor reviews and advises

Seamless coordination replaces multiple touchpoints.


Benefits of Local Partnerships


For Patients

  • Faster access to services
  • Reduced travel and effort
  • Better coordination

For Centers

  • Expanded service capability
  • No need for heavy investment
  • Efficient operations

For Partners

  • Increased business
  • Structured demand flow
  • Long-term collaboration

Everyone benefits from coordination.


Why This Model Scales


Uses Existing Infrastructure

  • No need to build new hospitals or labs
  • Leverages available resources

Standardized Integration

  • Same model across locations
  • Easy expansion

Flexible and Localized

  • Adapts to local availability
  • Maintains consistency through system

Scale comes from partnerships, not ownership.


What This Model Does NOT Do

  • Does not replace partners
  • Does not centralize all services
  • Does not remove local control

It enables:

👉 Structured collaboration


Long-Term Vision

WARA aims to build:

  • A nationwide partner ecosystem
  • Strong local service networks
  • Reliable coordination systems

A connected network is stronger than isolated services.


Final Thought

Care is not delivered by one entity.

It is delivered by a network that works together.


Get Started

👉 [Partner With WARA]

4 - Social & Community Services

Social Services under DharmaCareNet deliver community-driven programs such as health awareness, preventive care, elder engagement, and outreach camps. These initiatives improve access, build trust, and extend care beyond paid services.

Care Beyond Transactions.

What are Social Services

Social Services are community-focused initiatives delivered through DharmaCareNet centers to improve health awareness, access, and engagement.

These services are:

  • Low-cost or free
  • Community-oriented
  • Preventive in nature

Not all care should be transactional.


Why Social Services are Important

Many communities face:

  • Lack of health awareness
  • Delayed diagnosis
  • Limited access to basic care
  • Social isolation among elders

These issues cannot be solved only through paid services.


Awareness and early action prevent bigger problems.


The WARA Approach

WARA integrates social services with its care system to:

  • Build trust within communities
  • Improve early detection
  • Encourage preventive habits
  • Identify future care needs

Social service strengthens the entire care ecosystem.


Types of Social Services


Health Awareness Programs

  • Education on common health issues
  • Preventive care practices
  • Lifestyle awareness

Preventive Health Camps

  • Basic health checkups
  • Early risk identification
  • Community screening

Mobile Healthcare Outreach

  • Visits to remote or underserved areas
  • Basic health assessments
  • Patient registration into system

Elder Engagement Activities

  • Social interaction sessions
  • Cultural and wellness programs
  • Mental well-being support

Women & Caregiver Awareness

  • Training awareness
  • Skill development introduction
  • Career opportunity exposure

These programs connect care with community life.


How Social Services Work


Step 1: Community Identification

  • Areas with need identified
  • Local engagement initiated

Step 2: Program Planning

  • Activity designed based on need
  • Resources and partners aligned

Step 3: Execution

  • Conducted through DharmaCareNet centers
  • Supported by partners and volunteers

Step 4: Data & Follow-Up

  • Individuals registered in system
  • High-risk cases identified
  • Further care coordinated

Social services become entry points into structured care.


Integration with WARA System

Social Services connect with:

  • EduCareNet → recruitment and training
  • HealthCareNet → medical follow-up
  • HomeCareNet → caregiver deployment
  • AyushCareNet → wellness programs

Outreach feeds the entire system.


Benefits of Social Services


For Communities

  • Improved awareness
  • Better health practices
  • Early intervention

For WARA

  • Trust building
  • Network expansion
  • Demand generation

For Partners & CSR

  • Measurable impact
  • Structured execution
  • Scalable programs

Social impact and system growth go together.


Role in CSR & Funding

Social Services enable:

  • CSR partnerships
  • NGO collaboration
  • Government alignment

Programs can be:

  • Sponsored
  • Co-executed
  • Scaled across regions

Impact can be measured, tracked, and expanded.


What This Does NOT Do

  • Does not replace medical treatment
  • Does not operate as charity alone
  • Does not function without structure

It focuses on:

👉 impact with accountability


Long-Term Vision

Over time, Social Services aim to:

  • Improve community health awareness
  • Reduce preventable diseases
  • Build strong local engagement
  • Create a pipeline for care services

Strong communities build strong systems.


Final Thought

Care is not only about treatment.

It begins with awareness, connection, and community support.


Get Involved

👉 [Partner With WARA]

5 - Infrastructure Model

Infrastructure Model under DharmaCareNet defines WARA’s asset-light approach to scaling care services using local spaces, partner facilities, and distributed community centers instead of centralized infrastructure.

Scale Without Building Everything.

What is the Infrastructure Model

WARA follows an asset-light, distributed infrastructure model.

Instead of building large centralized facilities, WARA:

  • Uses local community spaces
  • Partners with existing hospitals and labs
  • Enables women-led community centers

Infrastructure is distributed, not centralized.


Why This Model is Needed

Traditional healthcare expansion requires:

  • High capital investment
  • Long setup time
  • Limited scalability

This creates:

  • Slow growth
  • High operational cost
  • Limited reach in rural areas

Building infrastructure slows down access.


The WARA Approach

WARA separates:

Ownership vs. Access

  • Does not own all infrastructure
  • Ensures access through partnerships
  • Coordinates services through systems

Access matters more than ownership.


Core Elements of the Model


Community Centers (DharmaCareNet)

  • Small, local hubs
  • Operated by trained women entrepreneurs
  • Provide last-mile service access

Partner Infrastructure

  • Hospitals for treatment
  • Labs for diagnostics
  • Ambulance networks for transport

Home-Based Care

  • Services delivered at home
  • Reduces dependency on facilities

Digital Infrastructure

  • Care Ledger
  • Coordination systems
  • Real-time tracking

Physical + Digital = Complete system.


How It Works Together


Local Access

Patients enter through:

  • Community centers
  • HomeCareNet
  • Outreach programs

Service Routing

Needs are routed to:

  • Doctors
  • Labs
  • Caregivers
  • Wellness providers

Execution

Services delivered through:

  • Partners
  • Caregivers
  • Community centers

Monitoring

  • All activities tracked
  • Outcomes monitored
  • Families informed

The system connects everything.


Benefits of This Model


Low Capital Requirement

  • No need to build hospitals everywhere
  • Minimal setup for each center

Fast Expansion

  • Easy to replicate
  • Can scale across regions quickly

Local Adaptability

  • Works in urban, semi-urban, and rural areas
  • Uses available resources

Sustainable Operations

  • Lower fixed cost
  • Higher efficiency

Scale becomes practical and sustainable.


Role of Government Infrastructure

WARA can collaborate with:

  • District hospitals
  • Public health centers
  • Underutilized facilities

Through:

  • Structured agreements
  • Program-based usage

Existing infrastructure can be better utilized.


Role of Partners

Partners provide:

  • Physical infrastructure
  • Specialized services
  • Local execution support

WARA provides:

  • System
  • Coordination
  • Demand

Partnership creates efficiency.


What This Model Does NOT Do

  • Does not build hospitals everywhere
  • Does not centralize services
  • Does not depend on one location

It focuses on:

👉 distributed access and coordination


Long-Term Vision

This model enables:

  • Nationwide expansion
  • Rapid service availability
  • Strong local ecosystems

A distributed system can reach everyone.


Final Thought

Healthcare should not be limited by infrastructure.

WARA proves that access, coordination, and systems can deliver care without building everything.


Get Started

👉 [Partner With WARA]

6 - Center Operations

Center Operations under DharmaCareNet defines the daily workflow of a community care center, including patient coordination, service delivery, partner integration, and Care Ledger tracking to ensure structured, efficient, and reliable operations.

Run Locally. Operate Systemically.

What are Center Operations

Center Operations define how a DharmaCareNet center functions on a daily basis.

Each center operates as:

  • A care coordination hub
  • A healthcare access point
  • A service delivery node

Every day follows a structured workflow.


The Role of the Center Operator

The operator is responsible for:

  • Patient interaction and coordination
  • Managing service flow
  • Connecting with partners
  • Maintaining records

She acts as:

  • Care coordinator
  • Health facilitator
  • Community service provider

One trained operator runs the entire system locally.


A Typical Day at the Center


Morning: Patient Intake & Consultation

  • Patients visit the center
  • Symptoms and needs recorded
  • Consultation arranged (tele / doctor visit)

Midday: Coordination & Execution

  • Diagnostic tests scheduled
  • Sample collection arranged
  • Caregivers assigned
  • Prescriptions coordinated

Afternoon: Follow-Up & Delivery

  • Reports reviewed
  • Medicines coordinated
  • Patient follow-ups conducted

Evening: Wellness & Community Activities

  • Yoga sessions
  • Elder engagement
  • Awareness programs

The center runs as a full-day service hub.


Core Operational Activities


Patient Registration & Tracking

  • All patients entered into system
  • History maintained
  • Care plans tracked

Service Coordination

  • Doctor consultations
  • Diagnostics scheduling
  • Caregiver deployment

Partner Management

  • Labs and ambulance coordination
  • Hospital referrals
  • Pharmacy linkage

Care Ledger Updates

  • Daily activities recorded
  • Health updates tracked
  • Reports generated

Every action is recorded and visible.


Emergency Handling Workflow


Step 1: Alert Received

  • From caregiver or system
  • Through Care Ledger or hotline

Step 2: Immediate Response

  • Operator coordinates first responder
  • Ambulance activated

Step 3: Hospital Coordination

  • Predefined hospital informed
  • Admission process initiated

Step 4: Family Notification

  • Real-time updates shared
  • Status tracked continuously

Response is structured, not reactive.


Revenue Activities at the Center

A center generates income through:


Service Coordination

  • Consultation coordination
  • Diagnostics and referrals

Care Services

  • Caregiver deployment
  • ElderCareNet coordination

Wellness Programs

  • Yoga sessions
  • Preventive programs

Training & Recruitment

  • EduCareNet enrollment
  • Caregiver sourcing

Multiple small streams create sustainable income.


Tools Used in Operations


Care Ledger

  • Tracks all activities
  • Maintains transparency

Communication System

  • Connects with partners
  • Coordinates services

Digital Records

  • Patient data
  • Reports and history

Technology supports consistency.


Quality & Protocols

Operations follow:

  • Defined workflows
  • Standard service steps
  • Escalation protocols

This ensures:

  • Reliability
  • Accountability
  • Consistency

Systems reduce dependency on individuals.


Challenges and How WARA Supports


Challenge: Coordination Complexity

Solution: Standard workflows and training


Challenge: Partner Management

Solution: Pre-defined network and protocols


Challenge: Trust Building

Solution: Care Ledger transparency


The system supports the operator at every step.


What Center Operations Do NOT Include

  • Performing surgeries
  • Independent medical decision-making
  • Running full-scale hospitals

Focus remains on:

👉 coordination, access, and delivery


Long-Term Evolution

Over time, a center can:

  • Increase service volume
  • Expand partnerships
  • Train more caregivers
  • Become a regional hub

Growth comes from consistency.


Final Thought

A system is only as strong as its daily execution.

Center Operations ensure that every promise of WARA is delivered on the ground.


Get Started

👉 [Partner With WARA]