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Published by joel-worrall

Professor Jim Harrison, I Presume

phpafQaLgDr. Jim Harrison is our excellent medical director at the CURE Malawi hospital.

You may now also call him by another name if you wish:  Professor.  Dr. Harrison has been named as an associate professor of the College of Medicine at the University of Malawi.

We asked Dr. Harrison to share some of his thoughts about this.  He was kind enough to send us this dispatch from Malawi:

I started in Malawi in December 1999, before the dream of the CURE hospital was conceived, and I was employed full-time by the College of Medicine of the University of Malawi as lecturer in the surgical department. During that year, Chris Lavy shared his dream with me of a Christian orthopaedic hospital in Blantyre, working in close cooperation with the medical college. Dr. Scott Harrison visited and offered Chris the role of chairman of the new hospital and me the role of medical director.

In December 2000, I returned to the United Kingdom for eight months. When I resumed service in Malawi, it was as a CURE employee, but I continued assisting the medical college in an honorary capacity as I have done to this day.

My role in the medical school has been to teach medical students and help in their regular and final examinations. I have also been heavily involved in postgraduate orthopaedic education, both in stimulating a weekly teaching meeting and in mentoring trainee orthopaedic surgeons (residents) from Malawi, our region in Africa, and the UK.

I undertake regular clinical duties at the government teaching hospital including on-call and a weekly fracture surgery list. In my 10 years in Malawi, I have been active in research, and my particular interests have been in HIV, orthopaedics and chronic osteomyelitis (bone infection).

In recognition of my services, I was honoured in 2004 to be promoted to honorary senior lecturer and in July 2010 to be made associate professor in the college of medicine.

I believe the close cooperation between the Beit CURE International Hospital and the College of Medicine has brought mutual benefit as we have sought to develop orthopaedics in Malawi through close cooperation and good personal relationships. I would like to thank Professor Nyengo Mkandawire, head of the department of surgery and himself an orthopaedic surgeon, who has been kind enough to welcome this cooperation.

“Christmas in October” for CURE Dominican Republic

CURE Dominican Republic gets a new C-armCURE Dominican Republic gets a new C-arm

It’s Friday and the perfect time to finish out the week with glad tidings of great joy! This week, we received an update and pictures from CURE Dominican Republic. They’ve recently received a shipment of medical supplies from our headquarters in the U.S. That shipment contained one huge, valuable piece of equipment, a new C-arm! For those who don’t know medical lingo (I had to look it up), a C-arm is essentially a big, maneuverable x-ray camera used to show doctors a “live” picture of the patient’s bones on a TV screen while they operate. It’s an invaluable tool to a number of surgical disciplines – particularly orthopedic work.

Our interim medical director, Ted Beemer, described the arrival of the new C-arm as “Christmas in October!”

This device will help our medical staff do their jobs better – providing the highest quality care to the children and families who are in the greatest need.

CURE Dominican Republic gets a new C-arm

The excitement over the equipment’s arrival is just another example of the everyday experience of running a hospital in another part of the world, and it’s gratifying to see the results for someone like David Bell (CURE’s procurement and inventory manager) who spends 100 percent of his time acquiring, packaging and shipping these much-needed supplies to our hospitals.

Thanks for all your prayers and support of CURE International. This weekend please continue to remember our dedicated staff – in Santo Domingo and around the world.

The First EVER CURE Niger Clinic!

CURE Niger\'s First Clinic
With the official grand opening less than 1 month away, CURE Niger had it’s very first medical clinic, and Christine Lehman was gracious enough to take pictures and make them available on Facebook.
Click here to see the entire album.
Here’s an excerpt of Christine’s email to CURE HQ on the clinic.

Yesterday 43 children were screened, 15 were seen by the surgeon and he thinks that there are 5 possible surgeries. No club foot, two cleft cases and then some other conditions that [Dr.] Jean Francois believes he can help. Two cases were a brother and sister with a genetic problem, one was hydrocephalus (which we can’t do, yet). The hard part was not being able to help everyone. I will keep my eyes on the ones helped. I had a wonderful time talking to and photographing the children that gathered at the front gate to see what was going on. Don [Waardenberg - a volunteer] brought a balloon out and the kids loved hitting that around. The next clinic….same time, same place next week…..I will let you know.

While the official grand opening is still a few weeks away, we are so very excited and thankful to be able to share this awesome event with entire CURE community. Look for more great news from Niger in the coming weeks and months as CURE officially opens its 11th hospital!

Numbers That Matter

One in a million

Did you know there are an estimated 1,500,000 charitable organizations and foundations in the U.S.? Of that number,  5,500 are rated by Charity Navigator every year. For 2009, 261 international aid organizations received a Charity Navigator four-star rating – its highest rating.

But only 1% of organizations have received a four-star rating 8 years in a row.

We’re grateful and proud to report that CURE is part of that 1% of charities. As an international organization, receiving a Charity Navigator 4-star rating is a real accomplishment (Charity Navigator evaluates based on US expenses only whereas CURE operates in 17 countries). So when you give generously in support of the children and families we serve, you can know that the staff of CURE International is working diligently to be one of the most efficient and effective charitable organizations in the world.

Numbers from the last year at CURE

In the last year, CURE saw more than 200,000 outpatients in our hospitals and clinics. CURE provided 12,000 life-changing surgeries, and 4,500 infants in 17 countries were completely and permanently cured of the birth defect clubfoot at our CURE Clubfoot Worldwide clinics.

There are more than 1,200 staff around the world that work in CURE’s 11 hospitals and 17 clubfoot countries. Over 700 people spent time serving in CURE hospitals as short-term volunteers, including some people who gave up months of time away from their jobs and families. But there are fewer than 40 full-time and part-time staff of CURE in the U.S. that coordinate and manage finances, international operations, spiritual ministries, administration, volunteers, communications and fundraising to support the mission and ministry of CURE. That’s pretty amazing when you think about it:

1,200 professionals worldwide in 11 hospitals supported by less than 40 people in the U.S. headquarters

Stretching a dollar…

For the last 11 months, I’ve been honored to be a part of those 40 people working in Harrisburg, Pa., and across the US, and as the person responsible for communications, I think about all these numbers regularly. But there is another set of numbers that captures my attention even more.
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Vote for CURE on WordPress.org

WordPress.org

This week, CURE.org was recognized on WordPress.org as an organization making great use of the WordPress platform. WordPress is one of the largest open source technology projects on the Internet, and CURE.org is built on the WordPress platform.

You can support CURE online by going to their site and giving CURE.org a 5-star rating.

CURE.org is featured on WordPress.org

Sign up on CURE.org with your Facebook account

Greetings CURE Community!

For those of you who are on Facebook (and given that there are over 500 million people on Facebook, that’s probably a good many of you), I wanted to take a moment to highlight one of the important features on the new CURE.org – the ability to sign into CURE.org through your Facebook account. Here’s how it works.

You can login to CURE.org through your Facebook account

How do I login?

On any page on CURE.org, you can click on banner at the top of the page (see the graphic above) to bring up a login box. (see the graphic below).

Login to CURE.org through your Facebook account

From there, you can click on the Facebook button and a popup will appear from Facebook, asking you to login. Once you enter your Facebook username and password and click “Login”, the page will reload and you’ll see a new set of links at the top of the page.

Cre Carbonaro-Worrall is logged into CURE.org

Congratulations! You’ve logged into CURE.org using your Facebook account. Don’t you feel so “tech-savvy”?

So what?

Now, for the most important question: why should you login to CURE.org. Here’s a list of important reasons.

  • Signing in with your Facebook account makes it easier to Recommend a page on CURE.org to your friends and family through Facebook
  • Signing in makes it easier for you to comment on the CURE Blog
  • And… all the great features and programs we have planned for this year require that you login to CURE.org. So if sharing content online isn’t of interest to you, just wait. More great opportunities are on their way!

Hopefully that was informative and helpful. If you have a question or comment, I’d love to hear back from you in the comment form below or click “Email Joel Now” to send me a message directly.

God bless and have a good weekend!

A Day to Remember Dan Terry

On Thursday, August 5, 2010, 10 medical aid workers were tragically killed on a trip into a remote portion of northern Afghanistan. You can read CURE International’s official response here. Those following this event well know that one of the 10 victims was Dan Terry.

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Diane Lawrence on Nursing at CURE

CURE International’s Nurse/Anesthesia Clinical Director Diane Lawrence talks about the importance of nurses and their training at CURE hospitals.

Blogging Construction Projects in Malawi

In the CURE communications team, we’re always interested in new ways that people are using social media around the world and throughout the CURE family. At our hospital in Malawi, we have another interesting example.

Beit CURE Malawi

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Jonathan and David’s Story

Jonathan and David are two brothers who were born with clubfoot. Now they can run like everyone else thanks to CURE International’s hospital in Zambia.