Terms & Conditions
The website of Sewa Sadan Eye Hospital (SSEH) is owned and managed by Sewa Sadan Eye Hospital Trust, a not – for – profit.
Our registered address is: Sewa Sadan Eye Hospital (Trust), Behind Civil Hospital, Sant Hirdaram Nagar, Bhopal (M.P.) – 462030
- This website wwwsewasadan.org is for non-commercial use. You may not modify, copy, distribute, transmit, display, perform, reproduce, publish, license, create derivative works from, transfer or sell any information or services obtained from this website.
- You will not use this website for any purpose that is unlawful or prohibited.
- SSEH may improve or change the website at any time to rectify the inaccuracies or typographical errors.
- We will store the details that you provide to us in order to verify your identity.
- We will contact you from time to time with any information about SSEH’s activities, and those of its Member organizations that we feel may be useful to you.
- We will keep your personal information secure and never make it available to third parties.
- SSEH reserves the right in its sole discretion to deny to any user access to all or part of this website without notice.
- SSEH reserves the right to change the terms under which this website is offered.
- Indian law governs this agreement. You submit to the nonexclusive jurisdiction of the Indian courts.
- All contents of this website are the sole Copyright of Sewa Sadan Eye Hospital Trust. All rights reserved.
- SSEH makes all reasonable efforts to make sure malware or viruses are not transmitted from this website, however this cannot be guaranteed. We recommend that you safeguard your IT equipment before downloading information and files. SSEH will not accept liability for damage caused by viruses.

Nisha Solanki belongs to a large family of two brothers and four sisters (of whom 3 are married). Both her brothers and elder sister attend school. Nisha’s father is mentally challenged. The responsibility of earning is on the mother, who is a daily wage farm labourer and grandmother, who tends to her goats. Two earing members for a family of ten.
Blindness in children leads to deep impact on psychological, emotional, and socioeconomic growth to the family. A child with blindness is more likely to have delays in developmental milestones, to be more frequently hospitalized, and die during childhood than a sighted child. Such severe vision loss also adversely effects the educational activities, orientation, and mobility from the early stage of life resulting in lack of employment privilege. These differential characteristics between a sighted and non-sighted child is more obvious in developing countries. Moreover, the disability adjusted life years (DALY) loss in a blind child is far more than that of adults with blindness.