Sponsor Anti Rabies Vaccine for Dogs Save Stray Dogs from Rabies

Every year, thousands of people die from rabies transmitted by unvaccinated street animals. Help vaccinate street dogs and protect community from rabies. Fund rabies prevention campaigns to make your city rabies free and prevent dog bite deaths.

Tax Benefits · 80G
100% Transparency Score
8+ Years Active

Multi-city operations · Delhi NCR, Mumbai, Gurugram, Haryana

Street animals receiving free rabies vaccinations through Pawsitive Protectors program by AnimalCare India

When Rabies Threatens

India has one of the highest rates of rabies deaths in the world. Every year, thousands of people die from rabies transmitted by unvaccinated street animals. In cities like Delhi NCR and Mumbai, millions of stray dogs and cats lack rabies vaccinations. They roam freely, interact with communities, and pose a constant threat of disease transmission.

The 2023 study in Delhi NCR revealed that over 70% of stray animals were unvaccinated against rabies. Many animals show no signs of disease until it's too late. Many communities lack awareness about rabies prevention. The result: people are bitten, animals are feared, and the cycle of disease continues year after year.

The 2024 survey showed that without systematic vaccination programs, rabies deaths continue to rise. During outbreaks, the situation becomes even more critical. Unvaccinated animals spread disease rapidly. Communities panic. Animals suffer. Lives are lost. The World Health Organization's goal of Zero Rabies Deaths by 2030 seems impossible without immediate action.

When rabies threatens communities, animals and people are at risk. They wait, and they hope for protection.
When rabies threatens communities, animals and people are at risk. They wait, and they hope for protection.

The Hidden Crisis No One Sees

Rabies is not a rare disease. It is a daily threat. In India alone, thousands of people die from rabies every single year. Millions of stray animals lack vaccinations. Communities live in fear. Animals suffer without protection. The human and animal toll runs into the hundreds of thousands. Dogs, cats, and people are all caught in the same relentless cycle of disease and fear.

The tragedy is compounded by what happens when rabies spreads. Once symptoms appear, rabies is almost always fatal. People bitten by rabid animals face a race against time to receive post-exposure prophylaxis. Animals showing symptoms must be euthanized. Communities panic. The cycle of fear and disease continues, affecting both animal welfare and public health.

And then there is the suffering. During rabies outbreaks, animals are often feared and harmed. They cannot protect themselves. They cannot ask for help. They can only wait hoping someone will vaccinate them, someone will prevent the disease, someone will save lives. The most heartbreaking aspect of rabies deaths is how preventable many of them are. In most cases, animals did not need sophisticated solutions. They just needed someone to vaccinate them.

The Hidden Victims

In every community, the focus of public health is often on human diseases. Vaccination programs prioritise people. Medical care focuses on human patients. Media coverage centres on human stories. This is as it should be. But in the shadow of every public health system, there are street animals who receive almost no attention, no vaccinations, and no protection from rabies.

Animals Cannot Protect Themselves

When rabies threatens, animals face a choice: remain unvaccinated and risk disease, or receive vaccination and gain protection. Many remain unvaccinated. A dog without rabies vaccination will remain vulnerable to disease. A cat without protection will pose a risk to communities. An animal without vaccination will continue the cycle of disease transmission. The most heartbreaking aspect of rabies deaths is how preventable many of them are. In most cases, animals did not need sophisticated solutions. They just needed someone to vaccinate them.

Street animals are particularly vulnerable. They have no owners to vaccinate them. An animal in a busy city has no access to veterinary care, no protection from disease, and no support system. It simply roams freely until it encounters disease, and then it spreads disease until it cannot spread anymore. Many do not survive. Those that do are left feared, isolated, and at risk of harm from panicked communities.

Community members participating in rabies prevention and animal welfare programs
Every vaccination is a step toward Zero Rabies Deaths by 2030. Animals and communities need protection.

The Post-Outbreak Crisis

Rabies outbreaks are only the first challenge. In the weeks that follow, fear spreads rapidly through communities. People panic. Animals are feared and harmed. Communities lose trust. Without vaccination programs, many of these post-outbreak challenges are permanent. Public health infrastructure in cities is already stretched thin under normal circumstances. After a rabies outbreak, it is essentially impossible to restore community trust without systematic vaccination programs.

Without intervention, many of these post-outbreak challenges are permanent. Animal welfare infrastructure in cities is already stretched thin under normal circumstances. After animals become feared, it is essentially impossible for them to receive care without help. Communities lack resources for vaccination programs. Animals lack access to veterinary care. The animals that remain unvaccinated often continue posing risks, simply because no one was there to vaccinate them.

Community Impact and Public Health

For millions of communities, vaccinated animals are not just individuals. They are protectors of public health. A vaccinated animal is protected from rabies and cannot transmit the disease. A protected animal is healthier and less likely to cause conflicts. When animals remain unvaccinated, communities face increased disease risks, fear, and lost opportunities for human-animal harmony. Pawsitive Protectors understands that vaccinating animals is inseparable from protecting communities.

How Pawsitive Protectors Responds

Pawsitive Protectors was built on a simple operational principle: when rabies threatens, animals need someone who is ready to vaccinate them immediately, with the right vaccines, the right approach, and the right consistency. Every day of delay costs lives. The programme maintains year-round operations so that when animals need protection, teams are ready to vaccinate them.

Systematic Vaccination Campaigns

The programme conducts systematic vaccination campaigns across Delhi NCR and Mumbai, targeting areas with high stray animal populations. Each campaign provides free rabies vaccinations, collaring for identification, and deworming. Trained teams ensure animals receive proper vaccinations and are monitored for health. Vaccination campaigns are strategically scheduled to ensure maximum coverage and follow-up booster shots.

Each vaccination campaign operates on a fixed schedule, allowing communities to prepare and animals to be located. Teams maintain detailed records of vaccinations, animal health, and community engagement. GPS tracking and daily reports ensure every vaccination campaign operates effectively. In the 2024 program year, Pawsitive Protectors vaccinated over 5,000 animals across 25+ neighborhoods in Delhi NCR and Mumbai.

Pawsitive Protectors vaccination campaigns providing free rabies shots to street animals across Delhi NCR and Mumbai
Systematic vaccination campaigns ensure animals receive protection from rabies.

Emergency Rescue and Medical Care

Vaccination is only the first step. Once animals receive protection, they need ongoing care. The programme provides emergency rescue services for injured animals, comprehensive medical care, and coordination with partner veterinary facilities. Each rescue operation ensures animals receive immediate care and are vaccinated if needed.

The rescue protocol includes emergency response, medical triage, vaccination if needed, and coordination with shelters. Animals learn to trust rescuers through consistent care. Follow-up sessions ensure rescued animals remain healthy and that communities understand the importance of animal welfare. During the 2024 program year, Pawsitive Protectors rescued over 1,000 animals across Delhi NCR and Mumbai, ensuring that injured animals receive care and protection.

Community Education and Awareness

One of the most important and most overlooked aspects of rabies prevention is community education. When communities understand rabies prevention, animals receive better support. The programme conducts community sessions, awareness campaigns, and educational programs that break fear and create supportive environments. In the 2024 program year, Pawsitive Protectors educated over 50,000 community members about rabies prevention and animal welfare, creating a supportive ecosystem for Zero Rabies Deaths by 2030.

CSR & Corporate Partnerships

We invite companies to support our **CSR for animal welfare** initiatives. Our **CSR project for rabies control** and **corporate partnership for stray dog vaccination** help build safer, rabies-free cities.

  • Support public health vaccination drives through CSR
  • Sponsor rabies awareness camps in your operation areas
  • Empower community animal vaccination support

In Their Own Words

"AnimalCare India's work has transformed our community. The vaccination campaigns have significantly reduced rabies cases, and the rescue operations have saved countless lives. Their dedication to animal welfare is truly inspiring."

Dr. Priya SharmaVeterinarian, Gurugram

"Before AnimalCare India came to our area, stray animals were suffering and the community was at risk. Now we have a systematic approach to animal welfare, and the community has learned to coexist peacefully with animals."

Rajesh KumarCommunity Leader, Delhi

Pawsitive Protectors in Action

Street animal rescue Mumbai - providing emergency medical care to injured stray animals

Street animal rescue Mumbai - providing emergency medical care to injured stray animals

Free rabies vaccination programs protecting communities - Zero Rabies Deaths by 2030 Mission

Free rabies vaccination programs protecting communities - Zero Rabies Deaths by 2030 Mission

Community participating in animal welfare India and rabies prevention awareness programs

Community participating in animal welfare India and rabies prevention awareness programs

Stray dog vaccination programs providing free rabies shots and deworming

Stray dog vaccination programs providing free rabies shots and deworming

Where to donate for animal welfare India - emergency street animal rescue operations

Where to donate for animal welfare India - emergency street animal rescue operations

About AnimalCare India

A

AnimalCare India

Compassion in action, transparency in practice

98%
Transparency
95%
Program Spend
8+
Years Active
8
States Covered
ISO 9001:2015 Certified Organisation
Multi-State Animal Welfare Operations since 2015
Registered under Section 80G all donations are tax-deductible
Contact: +91 9315982650

Frequently Asked Questions

You can sponsor anti rabies vaccine for dogs directly through Pawsitive Protectors. Your donation for stray dog vaccination drive near me helps us reach street animals in Delhi NCR and Mumbai, providing them with life-saving shots and medical care. Sponsor street dog vaccination drives to make your city rabies free.

342 People Stepped Up. Will You?

It takes 2 minutes to sign up and one share to start protecting animals and communities from rabies. No special training needed. No minimum commitment. Just the will to achieve Zero Rabies Deaths by 2030.

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