Community Care Centers
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.