Founded | December 27, 2005 |
---|---|
Founder | Neilesh Patel DDS and Elliot Mendelsohn MD |
Type | 501(c)(3) |
Focus | Healthcare |
Location |
|
Members | Over 2+ million people served with 7.2 million volunteer hours |
Key people | Neilesh Patel (President) Shahram Miri (General Counsel) Ravi Raghavan (Chief Operating Officer) |
Employees | 58 volunteers/employees[1] |
Volunteers | Over 150,000 website users |
Website | www.healthcarevolunteer.com |
HealthCare Volunteer is a non-profit organization that connects volunteers with a health-related volunteering opportunity.[2][3] The organization provides medical, dental, and surgical services to needy patients and impoverished people worldwide, through indirect and direct patient-care programs.[4][5]
The company also provides a social networking application that allows health volunteers to connect with each other and create new volunteer teams. The organization has matched over 290,000 volunteers to nearly 3,300 organizations worldwide.[3] In total, over 1.5 million patients have received health care as a result of its indirect and direct patient care programs.
In 2005, during his first year at UCLA Dental School, Patel decided to travel to Brazil to provide dental services to underserved communities. But, he encountered difficulties in finding volunteer opportunities, having contacted more than 15 Brazilian organizations and receiving no response. He found that other dental and medical students had experienced similar problems. To address this problem, Patel created the Dental Volunteer and later HealthCare Volunteer to help connect students with volunteer opportunities.[6]
During Dental school, Neilesh Patel said he spent many "pizza nights" – subsisting on pizza and pulling all-nighters teaching himself how to program and build a Web site, which became the backbone of HealthCare Volunteer. He said he was driven by the belief that all qualified applicants should have the opportunity to volunteer. Soon, now-orthopedic surgeon Elliot Mendelosohn, also a biomedical engineering major in his undergraduate days, joined Patel to help build HealthCare Volunteer.[7]
Founded by Neilesh Patel DDS and Elliot Mendelsohn MD in November 2005, HealthCare Volunteer has a large listing of health-related volunteering opportunities serving the non-profit sector.[3] Volunteers include physicians, dentists, medical students, and dental assistants, who donate their time to provide services, including free surgery and dental care.[3] The organization has direct patient care programs in over 10 countries, including India, Ecuador, Kenya, Tanzania, Liberia, Cameroon, and Paraguay.
In 2007, Patel was selected as a YouthActionNet Fellow in recognition of the organization's efforts, which was awarded at the Embassy of Finland in Washington DC.[8][9] In 2008, Patel was awarded the UCLA Charles E Young Humanitarian Award for his work in global health. Patel reportedly dropped out of the UCLA MBA Program in 2007 after starting classes his first quarter as the first ever student in the integrated DDS/MBA program in order to focus on HV's growth.[citation needed]
Patel and Mendelsohn have also established HealthCare Tourism International, the first non profit medical tourism accreditation service.[10] Patel started his first non-profit StudentsHelp.org (www.studentshelp.org) at age 17, which helped provide computer services and technical support to needy people around the world.
In 2013, Patel received the Samuel S. Beard Award for Greatest Public Service by an Individual 35 Years or Under, an award given out annually by Jefferson Awards.[11]
One of the unique features of the HealthCare Volunteer website is its ability to allow volunteers to create online profiles and connect with other volunteers. Once volunteers have signed up and created their profiles, they can form volunteering teams for service at home or abroad.[citation needed]
HealthCare Volunteer has sought to reduce the financial burdens for both volunteers and organizations. First, volunteers pay no money to search HealthCare Volunteer for volunteering opportunities nor must organizations pay any money to post their volunteering opportunities on HealthCare Volunteer. Secondly, HealthCare Volunteer strives to exclusively partner with organizations that do not charge their volunteers additional money beyond accommodation and other essential services in order to volunteer. HealthCare Volunteer believes that volunteers are already volunteering their time and effort, and should not be required to pay additional fees above the basic costs (travel, accommodation, and basic services).[12]
In 2007, HealthCare Volunteer began awarding volunteers who helped advance the mission of HealthCare Volunteer.[13]
2007 Awards:
Award | Recipient | Comments |
---|---|---|
Leadership | Ravi Raghavan | For fundraising, recruiting, public relations, and new partnerships |
Medical Field Excellence | Dr. Samuel Feinstein | For surgery work in Tanzania |
Dental Field Excellence | Dr. Jason Ehtessabian | For dental work in Tanzania |
Innovation Award | Dr. Tara Athan, PhD | For world's first health-related NGO and volunteer interactive, online map |
Opportunity Expansion Award | Erick Mlanga | For creating volunteering opportunities in Tanzania |
Organizational Award | Carolina Myans | For uploading new volunteering opportunities onto HealthCare Volunteer's website |
Student Volunteer Award | Colin Casault | For overcoming numerous obstacles to perform volunteer work in rural Tanzania |
2008 Awards:
Award | Recipient | Comments |
---|---|---|
Leadership | Ravi Raghavan | This year, Mr. Raghavan launched
the India chapter of HealthCare Volunteer and recruited new volunteers from India. |
Medical Field Excellence | Dr. Seth Podolsky | For public health medical work in Galapagos Islands |
Dental Field Excellence | Andi Michels | For dental work in Tanzania |
Innovation Award | Adil Shafique | For world's first health-related NGO and volunteer interactive, online map |
Opportunity Expansion Award | Catherine Matthys | For creating volunteering opportunities in Tanzania |
Student Volunteer Award | Sarah Richardson | For overcoming numerous obstacles to perform volunteer work in rural Tanzania |
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HealthCare Volunteer.
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