From 12 PM to 2 PM, caregivers can access free, hot, hygienic, and wholesome meals in designated hospital spaces established through partnerships with the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation and the respective hospitals. |
Mumbai: Akshaya Chaitanya has launched Swasthya Ahara program to alleviate hunger and financial strain for patients’ caregivers at government hospitals and cancer care centers. The initiative is already serving healthy meals to over 8,000 people across more than 30 hospitals in Mumbai.
In a bustling city where hospitals brim with patients and their caregivers, the challenge of accessing healthy, affordable meals often compounds the emotional and logistical strain of caregiving.
Recognizing this critical gap, Akshaya Chaitanya has launched Swasthya Ahara, an initiative dedicated to providing free, nutritious meals to hospital caregivers, ensuring they have the strength and support to face their daily challenges.
Every day, thousands of caregivers travel from Mumbai’s outskirts and beyond, dedicating themselves to their loved ones’ recovery. However, the demands of caregiving often leave little time or resources for proper nutrition.
For many, this leads to compromised health, financial strain, and diminished capacity to provide care. Addressing this pressing issue, the Swasthya Ahara program now serves over 8,000 caregivers daily across 32 government and trust-run hospitals in Mumbai.
From 12 PM to 2 PM, caregivers can access free, hot, hygienic, and wholesome meals in designated hospital spaces established through partnerships with the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation and the respective hospitals.
These thoughtfully designed spaces offer handwashing facilities, comfortable seating areas to withstand any weather, and clean drinking water, ensuring caregivers can eat with dignity and convenience.
The impact of Swasthya Ahara goes beyond mere sustenance. By eliminating the daily struggle of arranging meals, the program allows caregivers to focus entirely on their loved ones while alleviating financial stress.
Families, on average, save ₹2,000 monthly per family on food expenses, with the program delivering financial relief worth ₹292 million to date. For over 76% of caregivers who rely on these meals to meet their daily nutritional needs, the results are life-changing: improved energy, reduced stress, and enhanced caregiving capacity.
Looking to the future, Akshaya Chaitanya aims to broaden the reach and efficiency of the program. Planned enhancements include GPS tracking for meal deliveries, expanded feedback systems to accommodate caregiver preferences, and scaling operations to more hospitals and cities across India.
Vikas Parchhanda, CEO of Akshaya Chaitanya, said, “Swasthya Ahara is about more than providing meals, it’s about offering caregivers the strength and dignity they need to support their loved ones. By creating a dependable ecosystem of nourishment, we’re fostering a sense of security during some of life’s most vulnerable moments.”