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Grenada Clinic
It
was during a 2002 family vacation in Grenada that John O'Brien, M.D.,
first thought about starting a clinic to supply and make braces and artificial
limbs for residents of this small eastern caribbean island.
O'Brien, section chief of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
at the Hospital of Saint Raphael and a graduate of St. George's University
School of Medicine in Grenada, was touring St. George's General Hospital
and was astounded at the large number of amputees walking on whittled
tree stumps.
These people would either literally have a wooden leg
carved out of a tree trunk, or would be walking with no legs, using only
crutches to ambulate, the Cheshire resident says.
He met with representatives of the Ministry of Health,
the Grenada National Council for the Disabled and St. George's School
of Medicine, to try and set up a clinic. After 18 months of planning,
O'Brien held a week long clinic at the medical school in November 2004,
making new, artificial limbs for two people and dozens of repairs on existing,
artificial limbs.
The clinic was already well stocked with equipment that
O'Brien and Cromwell resident Dave Mahler of New England Orthotics and
Prosthetics had worked to secure. Used, artificial limbs from throughout
Connecticut were collected and shipped to Grenada along with braces, canes
and walkers donated by patients and orthotic and prosthetic vendors. Both
Saint Raphael's and Mid-State Medical Center donated OR supplies. St.
Georgeās University School of Medicine alumni association donated money
to purchase equipment to fabricate artificial limbs.
O'Brien says the local residents in Grenada played
a large part in this endeavorās success. A local baker, himself
an amputee, was extremely helpful, allowing us to use his oven to
heat the plastic to make these limbs.ä
O'Brien plans to hold a clinic annually, making
Grenada a regional referral center for orthotics and prosthetics,
and is considering establishing clinics in other needy areas.
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John O'Brien, MD (right) and Dave
Mahler, CP (left) pose with a Grenadian man who has been fitted
with a new artifical leg. |
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