Pakistan Earthquake 2005 | Disaster Response | Direct Relief https://www.directrelief.org/emergency/pakistan-earthquake-2005/ Tue, 24 Jul 2018 22:26:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://i0.wp.com/www.directrelief.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/cropped-DirectRelief_Logomark_RGB.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Pakistan Earthquake 2005 | Disaster Response | Direct Relief https://www.directrelief.org/emergency/pakistan-earthquake-2005/ 32 32 142789926 Direct Relief Aid Tops $14 Million on Pakistan Earthquake on 3yr Anniversary https://www.directrelief.org/2008/10/direct-relief-aid-tops-14-million-on-pakistan-earthquake-three-year-anniversary/ Thu, 09 Oct 2008 02:17:19 +0000 http://ms188.webhostingprovider.com/?p=1122 Three years ago, a devastating earthquake shook northern Pakistan, leaving thousands to cope with dramatic, life-changing injuries. As the country has made the difficult journey from emergency response to reconstruction, Direct Relief has provided more than $14 million in assistance to local partners rebuilding the healthcare infrastructure and helping the injured recover. In particular, a rehabilitation center in Besham, in […]

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Three years ago, a devastating earthquake shook northern Pakistan, leaving thousands to cope with dramatic, life-changing injuries. As the country has made the difficult journey from emergency response to reconstruction, Direct Relief has provided more than $14 million in assistance to local partners rebuilding the healthcare infrastructure and helping the injured recover.

In particular, a rehabilitation center in Besham, in the Northwest Frontier Province, provides hope and high-quality care to the thousands of villagers injured by the quake. Shortly after the earthquake struck in 2005, Direct Relief and the Pakistan Institute of Prosthetic and Orthotic Sciences (PIPOS)—Pakistan’s premier prosthetic and orthotic center and teaching facility—teamed up to build five satellite centers throughout the earthquake-affected area to ensure that the injured would receive ongoing proper care without the burden of constant travel to larger cities.

Continuing care is especially crucial with injuries requiring orthotics and prosthetics. For example, a growing child who loses a leg has to be refitted frequently with new prosthetics as he grows or wears out his device. Proper fit and phyical therapy is important for adult patients, as well, so they can be comfortable with their prosthetics and live full lives.

As in Pakistan, even after the headlines fade, Direct Relief is committed to providing specifically requested aid to local healthcare providers in the wake of an emergency for as long as the need persists.

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Forward Momentum – The Pakistan Earthquake, Two Years Later https://www.directrelief.org/2007/10/forward-momentum-the-pakistan-earthquake-two-years-later/ Mon, 08 Oct 2007 19:24:23 +0000 http://ms188.webhostingprovider.com/?p=1125 Two years have passed since the devastating 7.6 magnitude earthquake struck northern Pakistan. Although the headlines may have faded, Direct Relief remains dedicated to supporting the rehabilitation of those still affected by the quake. With two recent cash grants totaling $95,000, Direct Relief’s financial support to partners in Pakistan has surpassed $1.2 million in total cash […]

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Two years have passed since the devastating 7.6 magnitude earthquake struck northern Pakistan. Although the headlines may have faded, Direct Relief remains dedicated to supporting the rehabilitation of those still affected by the quake.

With two recent cash grants totaling $95,000, Direct Relief’s financial support to partners in Pakistan has surpassed $1.2 million in total cash funding to groups dedicated to providing care to earthquake-affected communities, and $8.7 million in total assistance, including emergency medical material aid and cash investments.

Direct Relief has provided $50,000 to helped the Pakistan Institute of Prosthetic and Orthotic Sciences (PIPOS) expand their services to include rehabilitation for people who have suffered spinal cord injuries and were paralyzed from the earthquake.

Until this point, people paralyzed as a result of the earthquake were treated in a variety of places throughout the affected area, some living in tent hospitals, others in the capital hundreds of miles from their family. Many of those who returned to their villages did so without proper instruction on how to maintain good hygiene and consequently suffered from repeat infections and bed sores.

In an effort to combat these complications, PIPOS has started to use their strategically located Balakot center as a hub of paraplegic rehabilitation. To date, over 100 patients have registered and started therapy, and the center has brought on two additional doctors with specialties in rehabilitative medicine.

Direct Relief also recently disbursed the second installment of a $90,000 grant to the National Institute of the Handicapped, which is initiating the construction of an additional wing to their Islamabad care center. The center provides rehabilitative care to people struggling with physical handicaps or recovering from major traumatic injuries.

The grant covers the majority of the project’s total costs, projected at $175,000. The Marafie Foundation, a Pakistani aid group, manages the project and will provide additional financial backing if necessary. Both Direct Relief and the Marafie Foundation share a common concern for the health and welfare of earthquake-affected populations in Pakistan and are engaged in activities designed to save lives, relieve suffering, and lay foundations for recovery.

The new wing will also include additional examination rooms, stores, and separate male and female wards where family members can come and stay with patients receiving treatment.

“In Pakistan it is the norm to have your family bedside while you are recovering in the hospital,” said Brett Williams, Direct Relief’s emergency response coordinator, who visited the Institute in June 2006. “Most of those affected by the quake do not have family in the Islamabad area or money for a hotel room, so they try and sleep on the floor next to the patient or in some cases on the verandas and walkways.”

The Institute played a key role in the aftermath of the earthquake, serving as a post-operation recovery center for trauma patients while also providing care to its chronic disability patients. The dramatic increase in patient load strained the hospital’s staff and facility to the limit. The Institute avoided functional collapse with support from non-governmental organizations, including Direct Relief and UNICEF.

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