
Great News For India’s Dog Rescuers: Update 2023 On The VOSD Surrender Process!
As part of the VOSD dog surrender process, all rescuers have to submit the vaccination details and latest blood test results of the dogs they wish to surrender to VOSD.
Every year, over 400 of India’s most broken dogs travel across the country. They come by train. They come by airplane. They come in ambulances over 1,000 kilometres of highway. They arrive paralyzed. Blind. With failed kidneys. With collapsing hearts. With spines crushed in accidents. With tumours, no one will treat.
They arrive because somewhere along the way, the world decided they were too expensive, too inconvenient, too damaged to save. And that is when VOSD begins.
The VOSD Sanctuary is the world’s largest no-kill dog sanctuary, but the word “sanctuary” does not fully describe what happens here. This is not a place for healthy, adoptable dogs waiting for homes.
This is where India’s most medically complex, permanently disabled, and terminally ill dogs are given something they have never known before:
Stability. Dignity. And time.
These are not short-term cases. These are lifetime commitments. We know more than anyone that compassion alone does not scale.
VOSD operates with a 24/7 resident caregiving system, specialised handlers, paravets, hydrotherapy staff, cleaners, and caregivers whose role is as much emotional as it is clinical.
Paralysed dogs are turned to prevent bed sores. Bladders are expressed on schedule. Hydrotherapy pools maintain muscle in dogs who cannot walk. Blind dogs are never relocated, because consistency is their eyesight. Hospice dogs are not hidden away. They are comforted, monitored, and held. This is institutional veterinary care built for abandonment.
Where most systems focus on population control, VOSD focuses on the individual.
India debates stray dogs in courts and television studios.
These animals are not statistics. They are not policy debates. They are living beings with names, histories, and fear in their eyes when they arrive.
VOSD does not ask whether they are adoptable.
VOSD asks: Are they alive? Then they stay.
Our costs do not trend downward. They compound. And yet, the commitment does not weaken. VOSD never fails them.
VOSD Rescue & Rehab is not funded by sentiment.
It is sustained by individuals and institutions who understand that long-term care is expensive and necessary.
You can sponsor a paralysed dog.
You can support renal wards.
You can underwrite hospice care.
You can invest in the infrastructure of mercy.
Because somewhere, right now, another dog is being placed on a train, broken, frightened, alive.
And when that train arrives, VOSD will be waiting.
VOSD Rescue & Rehab is India’s only large-scale structured chronic-care institution for stray (= street + abandoned) dogs.
VOSD operates the world’s largest no-kill sanctuary, committed to a lifetime of care for India’s most medically complex and disabled dogs, providing each dog with lifetime medical and social care. The approach is clinical, not just emotional, focusing on medical triage and data-backed case management. Care is segregated by disability cohort (e.g., neurological, renal, hospice) with structured rehabilitation protocols and a 24/7 scalable caregiving system.
VOSD is not a rescue; VOSD Rescue & Rehab™ is life-term veterinary institutional medicine for stray dogs.
VOSD operates the world’s largest no-kill dog sanctuary not as a slogan, but as a legally, financially, and operationally binding doctrine. Every dog admitted under VOSD Rescue & Rehab™ is accepted with the understanding that care may extend for 8–15 years, including paralysis, organ failure, and hospice stages. Admission is not temporary relief; it is a lifetime transfer of responsibility.
VOSD’s intake model is clinical rather than emotional. Cases are evaluated based on medical urgency, survivability, chronicity, and long-term care requirements, not adoptability or public appeal. Pre-transfer stabilisation, documentation, and structured cohort allocation ensure that resources are deployed where medical complexity is highest, aligning rescue with institutional medicine rather than episodic compassion.
With over 650,000+ treatments and 10,000+ referral cases across the VOSD ecosystem, Rescue & Rehab operates on structured case intelligence. Each dog is classified into medical cohorts (neurological, renal, cardiac, geriatric, etc.), with longitudinal tracking of vitals, medication cycles, survival extension, and cost per cohort. Decision-making is evidence-driven, not anecdotal.
Paralysis management, hydrotherapy schedules, renal fluid regimens, CHF monitoring, hospice pain scoring; these are not ad hoc acts of care. They are documented, repeatable clinical protocols refined over years of exposure to high-volume, complex cases. VOSD functions as a chronic-care institution, not a conventional shelter, with standard operating manuals for each disability class.
VOSD segregates care by medical cohort: over 200 paralysed dogs, 200+ blind dogs, 300+ hospice cases, 100+ renal cases daily, and dedicated cardiac, hepatic, and orthopaedic populations. Infrastructure, caregiver training, environmental design, and medical oversight are tailored per disability category, recognising that blindness, spinal injury, and congestive heart failure require fundamentally different care environments.
Compassion alone does not scale; systems do. VOSD operates a 24×7 resident caregiving structure comprising primary caregivers, specialised handlers, paravets, and veterinary oversight, supported by infrastructure at the Sanctuary and referral hospitals. This layered architecture enables ~400 admissions per month while sustaining long-term chronic populations without dilution of care quality.
Start here to understand rescue and rehabilitation pathways.
Specialized rehabilitation approach for behaviorally complex dogs.

info@vosd.in
VOSD’s Rescue & Rehab program is dedicated to saving dogs in distress and helping them regain health, confidence, and well-being. Every day, our trained team responds to calls for injured, sick, or neglected dogs, providing urgent medical attention right where it’s needed. Once rescued, each dog enters a structured rehabilitation process that includes medical care, nutrition, gentle socialization, and behavioral support. We focus on holistic recovery, ensuring that every dog not only heals physically but also regains trust and emotional stability. Our mission goes beyond immediate care; we aim to reintegrate dogs safely into their communities, either back on the streets with proper support or into loving homes when possible. With ongoing monitoring and follow-up, VOSD ensures that every rescued dog receives continuity of care, maximizing their chances for a healthy, happy life. By combining compassionate rescue with expert rehabilitation, we give every street dog the second chance they deserve.

As part of the VOSD dog surrender process, all rescuers have to submit the vaccination details and latest blood test results of the dogs they wish to surrender to VOSD.

“Sharing is caring”. This old famous saying has been such an integral part of our lives. As children, experiencing the excitement of opening your lunchbox to share with fellow classmates,

The VOSD Sanctuary is a magical place – it is home to 900+ dogs. Additionally, VOSD is an open, clean and green environment where no dogs are chained or caged.

We frequently get asked this question- and we have several answers! The VOSD Sanctuary is a magical place- it is home to over 900 dogs. Additionally, VOSD is an open,