VISION STATEMENT

“Empower, Protect, Equalize: Quality Health Care and Violence Prevention for a Just Community”

MISSION STATEMENT

Committed to Humanity: working for health and justice for all through community empowerment

HMF is dedicated to achieving holistic health and wellness for all, employing a gender and rights-based approach to address rural and urban challenges. Our mission is to redefine ‘health’ and foster gender equality by actively engaging diverse stakeholders, including the younger generation, professionals, government officials, and community leaders. Through a participatory and inclusive strategy, we extend our reach to marginalized populations in villages across Osmanabad, Solapur, Latur, Nanded, and Aurangabad districts, as well as urban communities in the city of Solapur.

INITIATIVES

It achieves its mission through
  • Health
  • Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment
  • Women’s Rights and Empowerment Initiative (VAW and Girls)
  • Education
  • Disaster and Emergency Response
  • Research

Birth of Halo Medical Foundation (HMF)

HMF was born out of the aspirations of numerous empathetic medical students and practitioners who aimed to revolutionize the perception of healthcare at the grassroots level and improve the delivery of basic health services in India.

In 1980, a group of compassionate students at Aurangabad Medical College came together to discuss and deliberate on pressing issues such as medical ethics, education, doctor-patient relationships, treatment costs and related matters. This effort led to the formation of a collective – the Health and Auto Learning Organization (HALO) – driven by a shared mission to ‘extend health services to the most impoverished and needy’. Its decade-long dedicated work logically culminated in the establishment of the registered NGO – Halo Medical Foundation (HMF) – in 1992.

Dr. Anand Ahankari writes

“In 1980, Dr. Shashikant Ahankari posted  a questionnaire of 140 questions on the  notice board  of Aurangabad Medical College based  in Maharashtra  state.  One question was very personal, asking, “When you were born, was your umbilical cord cut by a knife or with a stone? Even then, you did not catch  tetanus  infection  and  you lived.  Is  this  a  coincidence?  Should  such coincidences  occur in someone’s life or should we think differently about  them?” Many of these  questions had no easy answers, but they created  discussion among the  students.  A group of them  decided to find some answers and began the Health and Auto Learning Organization (HALO) on 10th  September 1980. The purpose  was  to  create  social  awareness  among  medical  students  and  society,  provide  medical treatment and  implement rural development and  women  empowerment programs.  In 1992, the members of the HALO Movement felt the need to have a more formal structure.  The Halo Medical Foundation was officially registered as a charitable trust in order to provide a legal form and structure to the spirit alive within the hearts of these volunteers.

In September 1993, a terrible earthquake  struck the Osmanabad and Latur Districts of Maharashtra. More than  10,000 people  were dead, even more injured  and many people  were displaced.  About 25,000 houses  were  destroyed.  Then, the  Halo Medical  Foundation (HMF) began  to  work in the villages affected  by the  earthquake  providing health and infrastructure support.  Members  of the organization came together  and observed the health concerns of the villagers. Instead of short-term service, they  wanted  to  focus on  long-term sustainable healthcare services in  the  affected  and surrounding areas. They decided to form a grassroots, health service at the village level by training health workers. The project  was started  in January 1994 in the  form of “Bharat-Vaidya Training” (Village Health Worker) at Andur. Since then,  HMF has engaged  women  across all socioeconomic levels and implemented a variety of projects such as self-help group activities, awareness campaigns, sustainable farming,  livelihood  programs,  maternal and  newborn  healthcare projects,  as  well  as research assignments.

40  villages  are  connected  to  our  health  and  self-help  group  programs  covering  nearly  65,200 population. We also have network  of village health committees in 90 villages of Osmanabad  and Sholapur district. Further, HMF functions in 79 urban slums of Sholapur city and 20 villages in rural areas. Today, HMF is directly connected with more than 300,000 population. We continue to expand our work, and are looking for new and innovative ways to improve the lives of all.

REACH:

Marathwada region of Maharashtra:

Rural areas

District: Dharashiv  (previously Osmanabad)

Villages in the Tuljapur and Lohara blocks

Population covered: ……………..; …………

Urban area

Solapur city

Underserved communities communities covered under five Urban Primary Health Centres

Beneficiaries reached: 7,154

HALO MEDICAL FOUNDATION

At post Andur, Block: Tulajapur, Dist: Osmanabad – 413603
Maharashtra, India,

Email: hmf.andur@gmail.com

Phone: +91 70204 11760, +91 9766650102, +91 94220 69724

REGISTRATION

Public Trust Act (1950): F/2112/AGD dated 17/02/1992.
Society’s Registration Act (1860): MAH 316-91 (Aurangabad) dated 02/11/1991.
FCRA No. 083750060
Donations to HMF are subject to tax exemption under 80G of the Income Tax Act
Address of Registration: 440, Shodh, N-3, CIDCO, Aurangabad, India – 431003.

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