Rotary.org: News - GSE helps provide ‘legs to stand on’

 GSE helps provide ‘legs to stand on’

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Top: GSE team member Mary Jo Geyer meets with a patient. Bottom: Rotary Foundation Trustee Samuel Okudzeto addresses the conference. Photos courtesy of Mary Jo Geyer

A Group Study Exchange team from District 7300 (Pennsylvania, USA) broke new ground in May when it visited Ghana to participate in the first International Cross-Diseases Conference on Lower-Limb Care in the Developing World.

The team, composed of leading experts in diseases of the lower extremities, was led by Georgia Petropoulos Muir, current president of the Rotary Club of Oakland (Pittsburgh).

In concentrating on disease prevention and treatment, one of the areas of focus of The Rotary Foundation’s Future Vision Plan, the Group Study Exchange (GSE) served as a prototype of the vocational training teams that are being funded during the plan’s three-year pilot phase. (All districts will begin to participate in the plan in July 2013.) Foundation Trustee Samuel A. Okudzeto outlined the key features of the plan during his keynote address at the conference.

The conference theme, “Legs to Stand On,” shared the name of an ongoing project that targets disabling diseases and conditions affecting feet and lower limbs.

Legs to Stand On “includes both the development of technical tools and the co-implementation of projects to prevent disability in developing countries,” said Mary Jo Geyer, a physical therapist at the University of Pittsburgh and a GSE team member, in a report on the conference. “Two of the leading causes of global disability are diabetes and lymphatic filariasis [elephantiasis], affecting over 500 million persons. Somewhere in the world, a lower-limb amputation occurs every 30 seconds due to diabetes.”

The conference focused on achieving a consensus among international and national experts on the technical tools needed to guide the implementation of programs for foot and lower-limb care in developing countries. It produced a vital framework for preventing disease, disability, and premature death from chronic wounds, edema, and joint limitations.

“Ghana has been targeted as one of the first countries where the cross-diseases approach to community-based foot and lower-limb care will be implemented,” said Geyer, who heads a University of Pittsburgh project for self-management of chronic edema/lymphedema in individuals with mobility limitations. Conference participants are drafting training manuals for nurses, technicians, community volunteers, patients, and their caregivers in Ghana.

“We also anticipate beginning three-year pilot projects to implement comprehensive lower-limb care programs in selected countries [including India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Togo] as funding becomes available,” Geyer said.

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8 Comments:
At 10:00AM on 23 November 2010, Johan Lewin wrote: Amazing and unselfish you deserve a place in Heaven...WoW!!!! what an insiration
At 9:07AM on 21 October 2010, Rtn.pp.Ashok Vaghela.Porbandar,Gujarat>India wrote: Dear,Nice artical.We are also on way to GSE New zeland team 6 Persons .visit on january 011
At 4:31PM on 20 October 2010, Eugene Beil wrote: Great article. Many of our Group Study Exchanges from District 6950 in Florida have also led to humanitarian projects and matching grants. Many GSE team members have gone on to become Rotarians. I hope that Rotarians around the world will unite to seek to preserve GSE as a program funded by the World Fund of The Rotary Foundation.
At 1:10PM on 20 October 2010, dr.deepak dabhere wrote: Dear sir,this is a great project and of immense service to humanity.I am a ortho.surgeon,and have operated more than 2000 pts.of polio in camps . I am avaiable for service in need.
At 11:14AM on 15 October 2010, Joseph Davis wrote: Thank You I never new this was such a large problem I will be looking for more info on this subject
At 12:25PM on 14 October 2010, Catherine wrote: I Commend the Rotary International for this selfless service to humanity. May God richly bless you all;
At 9:43AM on 13 October 2010, Laura Bolton wrote: This is an extraordinary program: much needed to prevent unnecessary amputations and maintain quality of life! The Rotary Club is to be commended!
At 1:05PM on 12 October 2010, PDG Dr.Vijendra-RID 3150 wrote: Congratulations Geyer for an innovative and most useful project on Prevention od disability in developing countries, through “Legs to Stand On,” by the GSE member Mary Jo Geyer,of District 7300 (Pennsylvania, USA) under the area of disease prevention and treatment, is a great idea in preventing amputations and preserving Limbs.This is what we call" GIFT OF MOBILITY". We have in place an going Rotary Club project in providing free jaipur Limbs to Amputees through our Permanent Rotary Jaipur Limb Workshop.We will be happy to get associated with “Legs to Stand On, project in India.

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