This report captures Help in Suffering’s animal welfare work during its 45th year of service, reflecting both scale and deepening impact across Jaipur and beyond. During the year, the organisation attended 9,782 rescue calls, treated 12,500 animals through its hospital and OPD services, vaccinated 5,198 street dogs against rabies, and provided veterinary care to 7,600+ camels through outreach and rescue programmes, while expanding humane education to reach 9,500+ children, strengthening long-term outcomes for animals, communities, and public health.
This report captures Help in Suffering’s animal welfare work in Jaipur during its 44th year of service, reflecting large-scale operations and institutional maturity. Over the year, the organisation treated 7,210 injured and sick animals, vaccinated 7,100+ street dogs against rabies, and continued to build long-term impact for animals, communities, and public health.
This report reflects a year of renewed momentum and stabilisation following the pandemic, with Help in Suffering operating at scale across all core services. During the year, 15,177 rescue calls were attended, 8,393 animals were rescued and treated, over 3,000 street dogs were sterilised and vaccinated, and 4,000+ camels received veterinary care through outreach and rescue programmes, reinforcing long-term gains in animal welfare and public health
This report captures Help in Suffering’s animal welfare work during an exceptionally challenging year shaped by the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite lockdowns, the organisation attended 9,788 rescue calls, treated 15,800+ animals through its hospital and dispensary, sterilised 2,821 street dogs, and continued essential camel outreach across Jaipur and rural areas, demonstrating resilience, adaptability, and an unwavering commitment to animals in crisis.
Spanning an extraordinary year, this report documents Help in Suffering’s work before and during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. While sterilisation programmes were temporarily suspended, rescue services, dispensary care, and emergency treatment continued without interruption. Thousands of animals received medical care, and the organisation played a critical role in feeding and supporting Jaipur’s street animals during lockdown, demonstrating resilience, adaptability, and deep community trust in a time of crisis.
This report captures Help in Suffering’s animal welfare work during a year of steady, high-volume operations across Jaipur. The organisation responded to emergency rescues, provided complex veterinary treatment through its hospital and dispensary, continued large-scale street dog sterilisation and vaccination, and delivered outreach care to working animals, reflecting consistency, clinical rigour, and deep community trust built over decades.
This report presents a year shaped by continuity and compassion, as Help in Suffering strengthened its systems while responding to persistent animal welfare challenges. Rescue operations, clinical care, and street dog population management remained central, supported by a dedicated veterinary and field team. The year reflects the organisation’s emphasis on professionalism, teamwork, and the belief that consistent, humane care can create lasting change for animals living alongside people.
The 2016–17 report reflects steady progress across all core programmes, with a strong emphasis on prevention, veterinary excellence, and field-based care. Thousands of street dogs were sterilised and vaccinated against rabies, while camel welfare work expanded through village visits, treatment camps, and rescue interventions. Alongside this, rescue and outpatient services continued to respond daily to injured, abandoned, and sick animals, underscoring the organisation’s integrated, city-wide approach to animal welfare.
This report highlights a year of consolidated, high-volume animal welfare work across rescue, treatment, and population control programmes. Help in Suffering improved the welfare of over 18,000 animals during the year—more than 50 animals every day—through emergency rescues, sterilisation and vaccination of street dogs, and sustained care for working animals including camels, donkeys, and horses. The year also reflects growing recognition of the organisation’s work at national and international levels.
Covering a year of expanding impact, this report reflects Help in Suffering’s growing role as Jaipur’s leading animal welfare organisation. Rescue and treatment services continued at scale, while the Animal Birth Control programme maintained high sterilisation and vaccination coverage to support long-term rabies control. Alongside this, camel and working-animal welfare initiatives deepened outreach to vulnerable communities, reinforcing a model of care that combines emergency response with prevention and education.
This report documents Help in Suffering’s animal welfare work across Jaipur during 2012–13, a year focused on strengthening frontline care and lifesaving interventions. Over 4,500 emergency rescues were attended, more than 3,000 street dogs were sterilised through the Animal Birth Control programme, and vaccination coverage reached approximately 77% of the street dog population. Together, these efforts reflect a sustained commitment to reducing suffering, improving public health, and stabilising animal populations across the city.
This report captures a year of intensive frontline animal welfare work across Jaipur and surrounding rural areas, marked by emergency response, treatment, and early outreach. Help in Suffering strengthened its rescue and veterinary services during extreme summer conditions, responding to serious injuries, working-animal emergencies, and livestock health crises, while continuing to expand camel welfare and community education efforts. The year reflects both the growing scale of need and the organisation’s steady commitment to providing timely, compassionate care where little or no veterinary support existed.