Cameroon Ponseti for clubfoot, brace construction and neglected clubfoot training

April 22, 2013toApril 26, 2013

22-26 April 2013: Cameroon Baptist Convention Health Services will host a training course in Mbingo in Ponseti treatment for clubfoot, Steenbeek Foot Abduction Brace (SFAB) construction and surgical training for neglected clubfoot.

The course will be led by Mr Steve Mannion, UK orthopaedic surgeon and Michiel Steenbeek, physiotherapist and inventor of the SFAB, both of whom are trustees of Global Clubfoot Initiative.

If you would like more information on this course please contact us.

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2nd European Advanced Meeting for Ponseti Practitioners, Portugal

May 17, 2013toMay 18, 2013

The 2nd Advanced European Meeting for Ponseti Practitioners will be held in Porto, Portugal on May 17-18, 2013.

The meeting will be an opportunity for health professionals who are experienced in the Ponseti Method to share cases, discuss problems and difficulties and to generate collaborative research and discuss education and training strategies.

International faculty include Dr’s Anna Ey, Cristof Radler, Stephanie Boehm, Monica Nogueira and Cristina Alves.

The deadline for submission of abstracts is the 5th of May, 2013.

Download the preliminary programme for the meeting here Portugal Advanced Ponseti meeting May 2013 programme (5).

Download the abstract submission form here Portugal meeting May 2013 Abstract Submission Form (0).

You can register to attend the meeting at this link: http://www.asic.pt/index.php/ponseti-meeting-oporto-2013-registration

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GCI partner organisations lead the way in clubfoot treatment in Bangladesh

Global Clubfoot Initiative partner organisations Aide Médicale et Développement, Impact Foundation, Walk for Life and Zero Clubfoot are prominent in clubfoot treatment in Bangladesh. Since 2009, their collective efforts together with the Bangladesh Ministry of Health have seen thousands of children receive the life changing treatment they need and established services for clubfoot around the country. This report from Bangladesh highlights the great work being done there…

Using the Ponseti method over 11000 feet (7 000 children) have now started treatment to correct this deformity.

Our partners have established clinics throughout the country, so that few children have to travel more than 60kms for treatment. All treatment is free of cost.

The majority of the clinics are in government hospitals. Since 2009 our partners have been building awareness throughout the community. Thousands of community health workers look out for children with clubfoot. Programmes are in place that allow parents of children with clubfoot to support each other. The huge treatment database is now being used for research programmes. The first research paper has been accepted for publication in the prestigious Journal of Pediatric Orthopedics.

Sustainability is being built by working within the government system: government orthopaedic surgeons oversee many of the clinics. A strong MOU is in place with the Ministry of Health: clubfoot treatment is now in the 5-year strategic health plan. This MOU allows for the introduction of Ponseti training in the curriculum of medical universities, and colleges training other health professionals.

In the Dhaka Divison (population over 50 m) it is now estimated that over 75% of children born with this deformity receive free treatment in the first year of their life from our partners’ clinics.

Central to the Ponseti treatment is the wearing of foot abduction braces at night for up to 3 years. Approximately 1000 low cost braces are produced and distributed free of cost throughout the country every month.

The Minister of Health Professor Ruhal Haque warmly congratulated the clubfoot programmes in his recent address to the Bangladesh Conference of Orthopedic Surgeons in February 2013.

Volunteer overseas surgeons and physiotherapists regularly visit Bangladesh to train and evaluate.

Bangladesh Ponseti practitioners are now helping to establish similar programs in Myanmar.

Professor Fred Dietz recently commented:

“The Walk for Life program is quite simply the most effective clubfoot program in the developing world that I have seen or heard about. In 3 short years I have gone from being a teacher of the Ponseti technique to merely an evaluator in clinic quality – which is excellent! “

Professor Dietz is Professor of Pediatric Orthopaedics at the University of Iowa. He was trained by Professor Ponseti and became a long time colleague.

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