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Rotary Clubs, individual Rotarians,
and friends can contribute with
donations of used prosthesis and/or
financially to help meet the goals of
this humanitarian project and save lives
of Iraq's amputees:
FOR INFORMATION
ON HOW YOU MAY HELP, PLEASE CONTACT:
Ms. Vesselina Stoytcheva
Rotary Club of Capitol Hill
VNS Group, Inc.
601 Pennsylvania Ave NW
South Building, Suite 900
Washington, DC 20004
Tel: 202-434-8273
Fax: 301-934-1011
Cell: 240-441-7302
vstoytcheva@vnsgroup.com
Make checks payable to Montgomery Village Rotary Club
Foundation
(tax exempt under
section 501 c (3) of the Internal
Revenue Code)
Please send comments
to
vstoytcheva@vnsgroup.com |
Issue:
Our information from the Iraqi Ministry
of Health is that there are
over 80,000 amputees in Iraq, 5,000 in
the Basra area alone. Many of these
amputees are women and children who have
been injured by land mines or as a
consequence of war. It was further
estimated at that time that it would
take some 20-30 years to address the
needs of this existing amputee
population, assuming no new cases. For
additional information please see the
Iraq, Landmine Monitor Report at
http://www.icbl.org/lm/2006/iraq.html
The number of physically
disabled in Iraq is on a steep rise as a
result of landmines or other
consequences of war and insurgency.
Many of war-related injuries include the
innocent, often women and children. Many
are innocent victims of land mines.
Women are known to work outdoors and
children often play in unsafe areas
including mined land. Additionally, for
the entire population the medical
infrastructure in Iraq is so weak that
delayed treatments of illnesses can also
result in amputations.
The social and economic
challenges that confront the disabled
children (and adults) of war torn
countries such as Iraq are most often
insurmountable. Burdened with the
physical inability to become mobile,
many of the children are likely to be
severely handicapped in striving to
survive and their future prospects are
bleak. Their lives will be adversely
affected forever. In Iraq, disability
is linked to poverty. The disabled are
unable to function and are dependent on
others for their existence and
survival. Iraq is not a wheelchair
friendly environment. The disabled are
kept further away from any educational,
social or economic opportunities and are
at the mercy of institutions that might
be able to provide free or low-cost
health and subsistence support. For
those without limbs, the challenge is
even greater, as the cost of amputee
prosthesis is usually over the yearly
income of most families. In the case of
Iraq, the estimated 2005 per capita
income was $780. The average cost of
amputee prosthesis in the United States,
on the other hand, is around $7,000
(Source: Quotation from Hanger
Orthopedic Group, Inc., a major supplier
of prosthetics equipment). Handicap and
wheelchair friendly environments are
largely unknown in Iraq. Likelihood of
amputees becoming productive members of
such societies is extremely remote.
As a result of the wars
and insurgent attacks, health care in
Iraq has suffered substantially in both
accessibility and quality. Many of the
health centers have been either looted
or structurally damaged. Those that
function are with basic supplies
sufficient only to handle emergencies.
Emergency services are largely
unavailable. In the case of the
disabled, improved care in the future
has become less likely as many of the
doctors and specialists have left the
country to escape the conflict. Those
who remain behind are not expected to
improve their skills and knowledge due
to the lack of training, funding, and
the large number of hours devoted to the
job and endless emergency cases. Before
2003, there were 11 medical centers
reported that provided rehabilitation
for the disabled; presently, only two
have undergone structural rebuilding and
are operational.
The role of landmines in
the defense of countries is under
international review and debate. To
better understand the validity of this
proposal by Rotary and its partners, as
set forth herein, it is important to
review some of the facts reported by the
World Health Organization (WHO) on the
characteristics of landmines. These
small devices are triggered by wires or
by as little as 6 kilograms of pressure;
they cost $3-$75 to produce, yet cost
$300 to $1,000 to deactivate. Accidental
explosions can kill or damage even the
most trained disposal experts. Their
size, color and design lead children
into believing they are harmless toys,
yet children suffer the most bodily
damage because they are small and their
vital organs are closer to the ground.
These landmines can remain active for
decades; and are usually scattered
randomly throughout suburban and rural
areas where health care is limited or
non-existent.
Satisfying Strategic
Objective: To
provide training for Iraqi Ministry of
Health physicians, prosthetists and
technicians and medical supplies and
equipment for the Basra Prosthetic
Centre in order to facilitate
manufacture of prosthetics for civilian
Iraqi amputees. The Basra Prosthetic
Centre serves four regions: Basra and
three others. The project entails
capital outlay for the training venue in
Amman, Jordan as it is unsafe to do this
on the ground in Basra at this time as
originally planned. We have partnered
with the Al Hussein Society in Amman,
Jordan who have graciously accepted to
be the training venue. Ultimately, it
is planned that the Basra Prosthetic
Centre has updated equipment and
adequate medical supplies. Additionally,
as this is also a training mission, the
Iraqi Ministry of Health Doctors and
Prosthetists assigned to this Centre
will receive training. Ultimately, they
will be able to meet the needs of the
amputee population in the region.
The volunteer Rotarians
in the Basra, Iraq Prosthetics Project
have formed a number of distinguished
outside
partnerships. U.S. Department of
State alone have awarded $1.7 million in
grants to this project.
This project is entirely
managed by volunteer Rotarians. All
funds and donations received go directly
to the project.
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