A
Spinal Injury Centre for Nepal
Sir Edmund Hillary of New Zealand, first-time
climber of Mount Everest in 1953 with Tenzing Norgay and long-time
supporter of education and health in the Himalayan region,
opened the Spinal Injury Rehabilitation Centre in Kathmandu
on 7 April 2002.
"From my work in the Solu Khumbu [Everest] region, I
know that this kind of facility is extremely important for
this country," Sir Edmund said. "The hill people
who injure their backs as a result of falls from trees, trails
and hillsides require a rehabilitation centre such as this."
The Rehabilitation Centre opened in a converted hospital
with three paraplegics in its ward - a boy from Solu Khumbu,
a villager from Sindhuli, a labourer from Champaran in India
- as well as a woman with a disease of the spine. The Centre
is run by the Spinal Injury Sangha Nepal, in collaboration
with the Nepal Disabled Association.
"There is a great demand for rehabilitation services
of this kind in the country, and we can expect our 30 beds
to be completely occupied before long," said Dr. Anil
Shrestha, an orthopaedist who is Technical Director of the
Centre.
At the opening, Kanak Mani Dixit, Chairman of the Sangha,
said it was essential to come to the aid of those affected
by one of the most excruciating of injuries - that of the
spine, which disables a person and drastically affects the
quality of life of both the victim and his/her family.
Dixit, who conceived of the Centre while recovering from
a severe neck injury (the result of a trekking accident in
August 2000), said the Sangha requires NRs forty lakh (USD
51 thousand) to run the Centre at "full strength".
At the time of opening, the Sangha had managed to raise eight
lakh, he said, while appealing for support to allow the centre
to see through its first year.The Spinal Injury Sangha Nepal
is a registered non-profit society.
PICTURES FROM THE INAGURATION CEREMONY
Photographs by Deependra Bajracharya
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