UnSeen Health Screening is a flagship health outreach initiative of The Manpho Foundation, designed to quietly but powerfully transform community health at the grassroots. It combines modern preventive screening with traditional Panchagavya-based healing approaches to make “health for all” a lived reality, not just a slogan.
UnSeen Health Screening is a community-centric preventive health program that brings essential screening and counseling services to underserved populations through on-ground camps and collaborative medical partnerships. It focuses on identifying silent, early-stage health risks and connecting people to timely support, especially in areas where access to regular healthcare is limited.
The initiative envisions a future where no individual suffers avoidable complications simply because early warning signs went unnoticed. Its mission is to make preventive health checks as accessible and routine as possible by integrating health camps into village and urban-poor community life, and by combining awareness, diagnosis, and follow-up into a seamless experience.
Blood donation and screening camps: Regularly organised drives that not only mobilise voluntary blood donation but also offer basic health checks such as blood pressure, blood sugar, anaemia indicators, and other vital parameters, helping participants understand their current health status.
Panchagavya Cancer Chikitsa outreach: Special camps and awareness sessions introduce Panchagavya-based supportive cancer care concepts, offer preliminary risk assessments, and guide families on how holistic, cow-based therapies can complement conventional medical treatment under expert supervision.
Preventive health education: Each camp doubles as a learning space where doctors, health workers, and volunteers explain risk factors, lifestyle corrections, nutrition basics, and the importance of regular screening in simple, culturally rooted language.
UnSeen Health Screening works on a camp-and-cluster model: villages, urban settlements, and workplace clusters are mapped, local partners are onboarded, and recurring health camps are scheduled to ensure continuity rather than one-time activity. Data from screenings is documented securely, enabling basic trend analysis and helping identify high-risk groups that may need deeper interventions or referrals to hospitals and speciality centres.
The initiative is deeply inspired by Sanatana Dharma values of seva (selfless service), ahimsa (non-harm), and gau-raksha (cow protection), seeing health as a balance of body, mind, society, and nature. By integrating Panchagavya traditions with modern diagnostics, it honours India’s indigenous healing wisdom while remaining grounded in responsible, patient-centric care and ethical medical guidance.
Through UnSeen Health Screening, The Manpho Foundation aims to make preventive care visible, approachable, and trusted among communities that often access formal healthcare only at crisis stage. The camps help detect issues early, build health-seeking behaviour, and create a local ecosystem of volunteers, doctors, and institutions committed to long-term community wellness.
As part of The Manpho Foundation’s broader healthcare and community development mandate, this initiative complements its work in education, environment, and livelihoods by ensuring that beneficiaries are healthy enough to learn, work, and thrive. It exemplifies the Foundation’s belief that true development is impossible without accessible, dignified healthcare rooted in both scientific rigor and cultural wisdom.