Thursday , November 7 2024

Jordan 3D lab prints limbs for war wounded, disabled kids

– Back to school, back to work –

It has also benefitted people born with deformities, such as seven-year-old Palestinian refugee Asil Abu Ayada from the Gaza camp northwest of Amman.

She lives with five brothers and her parents in a mud house, and was born without a right hand.

With her new prosthetic hand, she can now go to a normal school and even sketch drawings.

Too shy to speak to reporters, she sat manicuring her artificial fingers with the help of her sister Ines.

The 3D devices range in cost from $20 and $50 (euros) — a fraction of the cost of conventional prosthetic devices, which can cost thousands of dollars.

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“You can design something that can suit this patient and is very specific to the activity of the patient,” Moreau said.

The new technique was developed by MSF in collaboration with “Fab Lab”, a digital manufacturing laboratory in Jordan.

Another beneficiary was Ibrahim al Mahamid, from Daraa in southern Syria, who suffered injuries to his left hand in a bombing raid in 2013.

A 33-year-old taxi driver, he had the hand amputated at a field hospital in Syria before moving to Jordan.

“The new prosthesis has given me hope to be able to go back to work and take care of family expenses,” he said.

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