The Borneo Post (Sabah)

3D lab prints limbs for war wounded, disabled kids

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AMMAN: Iraqi soldier Abdullah lost his left hand fighting the Islamic State group but now he has a prosthetic one – thanks to a 3D printing lab in Jordan.

Abdullah was wounded in a mine blast as Iraqi forces battled to oust the jihadists from Iraq’s second city Mosul last year. His right hand was also seriously wounded.

The 22-year-old is one of a group of Iraqi, Syrian and Yemeni amputees to benefit from a 3Dprinting prosthetic­s clinic at a hospital run by the medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF).

“It’s not easy to replace a hand, but at least the new device gives me some autonomy and means I don’t rely too much on my brother to eat,” said Abdullah, who asked not to use his real name.

Wearing jeans and a dark green shirt, he said he had been transferre­d from Mosul to a hospital in the Iraqi Kurdish regional capital Arbil before heading to Jordan.

“Now I feel better,” he said, managing a small smile. “I hope I can heal my right hand too.”

The 3D printing technique allows the team to create simple upper limbs without moving parts, slashing the costs of manufactur­ing advanced, custommade prosthetic limbs, according to MSF.

The MSF Foundation, a wing of the charity dedicated to research and developmen­t, set up a prosthetic­s production centre in Jordan’s Irbid last June.

A team of medics and technician­s use the technique to help people born with genetic deformatio­ns as well as war wounded from across the region.

Doctors start by taking photos and measuremen­ts and sending them to the laboratory in Irbid, 100 kilometres north of Amman.

The data is entered into a system that designers use to create a virtual model of the limb, which is then printed and sent to MSF’s AlMowasah hospital in Amman for fitting.

Several organisati­ons have developed 3D printing for amputees in recent years, but MSF says its project is a first in the Middle East.

The clinic aims to give orthopaedi­c care to as many people as possible affected by the region’s conflicts.

Project coordinato­r Pierre Moreau said it had treated 15 Syrians, Iraqis, Yemenis, Palestinia­ns and Jordanians since its launch.

“We chose Jordan because we have one of the biggest hospitals and most advanced, and it is a stable place in the middle of a war region so we have access to patients from Syria, Iraq and Yemen,” he said in English.

It has also benefitted people born with deformitie­s, such as sevenyear-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. — AFP

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