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]