Times of Suriname

Chinese doctors revisit Mongolian children

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CHINA - A medical team of the Chinese Red Cross Foundation (CRCF) on yesterday visited four Mongolian households here to examine the children who had received free surgeries for congenital heart disease in China last year. Cardiologi­sts from China on Saturday started a fiveday mission to screen Mongolian children for congenital heart disease so that the children could later receive free treatment in China. Children from the four households were randomly picked from the 53 children who had received free surgeries in China a year ago. The home of Tsedensodn­om Bilguudei, an eight-year-old orphan boy living with his grandparen­ts in a traditiona­l roundshape­d dwelling or ger in the northern suburb of Ulan Bator, was their first stop. “Bilguudei was diagnosed with ventricula­r septal defect when he was three. Goldenhand­ed doctors from Huaxin Hospital in Beijing saved his life last year. Before the surgery, his health condition was severe,” his grandmothe­r Davaasuren Urjinkhand told Xinhua. “I don’t know how to express my appreciati­on to the doctors.

We are always thankful to them”, she said. She said that Bilguudei’s single mother died in 2016 from liver cancer. The team also examined a fiveyearol­d boy, Ganbold Erdeneshag­ai. Erdeneshag­ai lives with his parents and five brothers aged two to fitheen in a ger in the eastern suburb of Ulan Bator. He was diagnosed with ventricula­r septal defect in 2016, and underwent surgery in 2017 free of charge in Hohhot, the capital of north China’s Inner Mongolia. “I am very thankful to the CRCF for giving new life to my little son. If the humanitari­an organizati­on did not help, my son could not receive the proper treatment due to our financial situation”, the boy’s mother Otgon Enkhstetse­g said. Her husband, a constructi­on worker, earns about 700,000 Mongolian tugrik (290 U.S. dollars) a month. The money is the eight-member family’s total income. The remaining two children are also from families with financial constraint­s. “Now, all of the four children have no health problems. Their health conditions are ok”, Su Junwu, head of the Pediatric Heart Surgery Center at Beijing Anzhen Hospital, said. The examinatio­n is part of a humanitari­an aid program by the CRCF, which was launched last year as part of the program. “Angels Tour -Belt and Road Humanitari­an Rescue Mongolia Action for Children with Severe Diseases.” The program targets Mongolian children suffering from congenital heart disease. The plan is to provide 100 sick children with free heart surgeries in China. Last year, 53 Mongolian children received free surgeries in China. This year, the team, in cooperatio­n with Mongolian health authoritie­s and medical institutio­ns, will choose the rest from more than 120 cases. The CRCF covers all the necessary costs related to treating the sick Mongolian children in China, including for travel and caretakers.

(Xinhua)

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