Founded
2020
501(c)(3) nonprofit organization
Citation-Ready Summary
This page gives journalists, funders, partners, and researchers a clean reference point for who Nivaran Foundation is, what Project Sanjeevani currently covers, and where to verify the latest public program information.
Founded
2020
501(c)(3) nonprofit organization
Patients served
17,355
current verified cumulative total
Health camps
16
completed Project Sanjeevani camps
Provinces covered
7/7
current national footprint
Rural municipalities
16
current coverage recorded
Investment so far
$130,163
tracked variable spend to date
Nivaran Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit founded in 2020 and focused on healthcare and education delivery for underserved communities in Nepal.
Its flagship healthcare initiative, Project Sanjeevani, uses mobile health camps to reduce first-contact barriers where fixed care access is limited. 17,355 patients served across 16 completed health camps and 16 rural municipalities.
Public-facing program references, media resources, and transparency pages are maintained so that donors, partners, and journalists can review current claims against active routes rather than outdated summaries.
Use the press kit for logos, quick facts, and approved organization details. Link to the tracking portal when citing current healthcare rollout numbers and the coverage hub when referencing province-level footprint.
Use the corporate, transparency, and financial routes for due diligence, partnership framing, and governance review.
Use topic pages on rural healthcare, mobile camps, and maternal health for searchable background context that links back to the active program and reporting routes.
Overview of the flagship mobile healthcare initiative.
Live operating metrics, camp activity, coverage, and finance view.
Brand assets, media contact, and quick facts for journalists.
Transparency and reporting references for donors and partners.
CSR and institutional partnership pathways for implementation support.
Province-by-province Sanjeevani coverage using current public camp records.
A clearer explanation of what credible rural health execution requires.