
Florida surgeons to help in
Puthukudiyiruppu
[TamilNet, September 16, 2005 03:58 GMT]
Florida based Rotarian Dr Ali Tahiri,
plastic surgeon Dr Bart Rademaker, and an Occupational Therapist
are scheduled to visit on post-tsunami aid mission to the
NorthEast of Sri Lanka early October. The team will conduct
counselling sessions and perform surgeries at the Jaffna
Teaching Hospital and in Puthukudiyiruppu hospital, Dr Tahiri
told TamilNet.
Dr Tahiri has a busy schedule till the end of October. "I
will be in Pascagoula, Mississipi on 22 September for Katrina
relief work and will proceed to work at Guadalajara, Mexico,
Medical Relief clinic for five days till 2nd October. I will be
in Indonesia for tsunami relief for work for a week and will
proceed to Sri Lanka for 10 days from 15 October,” Dr Tahiri
said. Dr Rademaker will join him along with Ms Catherine Zuiker
an occupational Therapist to Sri Lanka.
“We hope to train local doctors in basics of plastic surgery
and counselling work besides leaving around $150K worth of
medicines, and surgical instruments for Jaffna and
Puthukkudiyiruppu hospitals,” he added.
This is Dr. Tahiri's third visit to Sri Lanka. His first trip
to Sri Lanka in January was mainly a fact-finding mission to
assess the medical needs of tsunami hit areas. He visited Muttur,
Hambantota and other coastal areas and worked with local Rotary
club to provide medical assistance. Dr Rademaker, nurses Maureen
Huemee and Ms Sara Lucas accompanied Dr Tahiri on the second
trip in April when they conducted Trauma Counseling sessions and
performed plastic surgery on a number of cases. Additionally
they donated surgical appliances and over $80,000 worth of
medicines and drugs for free clinics for primary healthcare.
The relief effort to Sri Lanka was initiated by students of
Pine View school in Sarasota Florida as project “Wave Aid” when
the students decided in January to raise money for tsunami
victims in Sri Lanka. The fund-raising efforts rippled through
the school and community, expanded and provided the initial
impetus to the relief work for the surgical team.
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