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MALTATODAY 29 January 2023

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maltatoday | SUNDAY • 29 JANUARY 2023 12 COMMERICAL STEWARD Health Care Malta (SHCM) has welcomed the first two Ukrainian soldiers who are receiving treatment in Malta as part of a Ukrainian amputee rehabilitation program named Project Renew. Leading pros- thetics provider MCOP Interna- tional (MCOPi), SHCM, Stew- ard Health Care International (SHCI) and the charitable foun- dation Future for Ukraine (FFU) will assist as many as 24 victims of the war in Ukraine through- out 2023 in Malta. The program is supported by the Government of Malta, through the Ministry for Health. The first Ukrainian soldiers to benefit from this program are Vitaly Tarusin, 32 and Andriy Konovalov, 45. The two soldiers are being supported by Anna Kovaleva, founder of FFU, as well as Olena Nikolaienko, CEO and Head of Strategy and Devel- opment of FFU Poland. Vitaly Tarusin comes from the city of Kharkiv where he lived with his wife and two daugh- ters before the war, working as a builder and interior decora- tor. When the Russian invasion started, Vitaly decided to join the Ukrainian army to defend his homeland, despite having no prior military experience. On 2 October 2022, whilst on a com- bat mission, Vitaly was injured from artillery, tank and mortar fire. This left him needing an amputation of the left lower leg as well as wounded from a gun- shot fragment. On 4 October he was hospitalised in Kyiv and on 24 November Vitaly was trans- ferred to the National Military Medical Clinical Center. Andriy Konovalov was origi- nally from Donetsk but moved to Kramatorsk when the Rus- sian-backed insurgency began in 2014. Before the 2022 Russian invasion, Andriy worked as a physical education teacher and had no military experience. An attack on Kramatorsk military airfield made Andriy understand that a full-scale invasion by Rus- sia had begun. He decided to fight for the sake of his daugh- ters and in late February 2022 joined the Ukrainian Armed Forces in Kramatorsk. There he was trained and then sent to combat as an infantryman. On 7 October, whilst carrying out a combat mission near the city of Sviatove, Andriy was severely injured by a landmine. Imme- diately after the injury, Andriy was taken to a field hospital and eventually to Kharkiv hospital. Andriy was operated on and two weeks later he was sent to a hos- pital in the city of Sumy. Vitaly and Andriy are just two of more than 3,000 Ukrainians who have lost a limb in the war, primarily due to bomb blasts and other explosions. The two soldiers are undergoing an ad- vanced care model developed by SHCM and MCOPi profes- sionals that will provide them with prosthetic legs as well as therapy and training for victims, returning them to full function and allowing them to return home. They recently arrived in Malta and are being cared for by the teams at the Orthotics and Prosthetics Unit and the Vas- cular and Amputee Rehabilita- tion Unit at St Luke's and Karin Grech Rehabilitation Hospital, managed by Steward Health- care Malta. They will be spend- ing around four weeks in Malta receiving treatment, before re- turning to Poland and eventually back to Ukraine. Armin Ernst, CEO and Pres- ident of SHCI said: "Steward Health Care is honoured to be part of this important initiative, building on our long-term part- nership with the Government of Malta and MCOPi to con- tribute towards providing sup- port to victims of the war in the Ukraine and help them build a better future. Our priority is to deliver coordinated treatment in the right place at the right time, so that our patients can spend more time pursuing healthy, ac- tive lives and less time in hospi- tal." He added: "The collaboration between Steward and MCOPi collaboration goes back to 2018 with Steward's revamping of the Orthotics and Prosthetics Unit (OPU) in Malta. We en- gaged a global leader with long years of experience in the field of prosthetics, providing spe- cialised military prosthetics as well as life-long care for people with complex limb loss. I thank all those involved but in par- ticular to our dedicated staff at OPU, Vascular and Ampu- tee Rehabilitation Unit and the Physiotherapy Department at our hospitals in supporting this important humanitarian pro- ject and going the extra mile to ensure that this will not in any way delay care, increase wait- ing times or negatively impact the provision of prosthetics to Maltese amputees or other pa- tients making use of Steward's OPU and related rehabilitation services." Ian Fothergill, CEO at MCO- Pi said: "At MCOPi we work on a global level to advance access for amputees to the appropri- ate services and technology. We are very excited to launch Project Renew in Malta. This is a program which has been underway in the United States for several months to provide prosthetics for Ukrainian sol- dier amputees." "The next and ultimate step will be to create a state-of-the- art centre in Ukraine itself. The centre would not only provide care, but also hire Ukrainians and train them in providing the best healthcare and reha- bilitation methods for the most complex cases, using the most advanced techniques," con- cluded Mr Fothergill. The event was also addressed by Prof. Robert Gailey, from the University of Miami at the Miller School of Medicine in the Department of Physical Therapy where he has taught for more than 35 years. He has been a Special Advisor to the United States Department of Defense for amputee rehabil- itation and continues to work with military and veterans on several programs. Prof. Gailey said: "MCOPi, Steward and Malta's health care First Ukrainian soldiers arrive in Malta for prosthetic treatment as part of amputee rehabilitation programme

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