News
Islamabad hospital receives first orthopaedic
bed from Brad Pitt and UNHCR
ISLAMABAD, Dec 28 : The UN refugee agency on Wednesday
handed over the first orthopaedic bed donated by actor Brad Pitt to
earthquake victims at an Islamabad hospital.
Dr. Syed Fazle Hadi, Executive Director of the Pakistan
Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) in Islamabad, received the first
of 40 beds from UNHCR’s Representative in Pakistan, Guenet Guebre-Christos.
Worth over US$100,000 in total, the donation was made through UNHCR
by Pitt when he visited Pakistan in late November with the agency’s
Goodwill Ambassador, Angelina Jolie.
"We are grateful to our donor, Mr. Brad Pitt, for
supporting the relief effort for the earthquake-affected people of
Pakistan,” said Guebre-Christos. “This donation will bring
comfort to the injured and facilitate the work of the dedicated hospital
staff of PIMS.”
The Islamabad hospital was overwhelmed after the October
8 earthquake that killed over 73,000 people and left an equal number
injured. Casualties were flown in hourly from devastated areas in
Pakistan-administered Kashmir and North West Frontier Province. Twelve
weeks later, the situation has stabilized at the hospital, but remaining
patients – including 504 people with spinal injuries and 654
amputees – still need a high level of care.
“It’s not easy to look after quadriplegic
patients, who are prone to bed and pressure sores if they stay in
the same position for too long,” said Dr. Hadi. “But these
beds tilt from side to side and move up and down using electronic
switches and hydraulics. They will make it easier for nurses to move
the patients.”
He added, “This donation should be seen as an
example for other philanthropists and good people to help the patients.
We now have one rehabilitation centre and are building a second one
in Islamabad. Both will need gymnasiums for physiotherapy to help
spinal injury patients strengthen their upper bodies. We also hope
to have vocational training facilities to teach them how to make a
living despite their disabilities. Some of them will walk again; most
will not.”
UNHCR, too, has been trying to help quake victims get
back on their feet through a range of relief activities. The agency
has so far distributed 19,439 tents, 431,184 blankets, 60,413 plastic
sheets, 1,531 plastic rolls, 15,886 mattresses, 24,908 jerry cans,
20,008 kitchen sets, 1,359 sleeping bags and 31,628 bars of soap in
the affected areas. It is now in the middle of a winterization campaign
to provide everyone in relief camps with 3 blankets each and every
tent with two plastic sheets and four mattresses.
As lead agency for camp management, UNHCR is currently
providing material and technical support to the Pakistan authorities
and NGOs in 37 planned camps and hundreds of spontaneous camps housing
a total of 184,460 quake survivors. The agency offers advice on site
planning and coordinates the delivery of services like water, sanitation,
health care and education in camps. It also has 39 mobile teams to
build latrines and communal kitchens where needed, and to sensitise
camp communities on issues like winterization, fire safety and hygiene.