SharmarkE’S STORY

Home | Our Stories | Sharmarke’s StoryPage 19

Sharmarke was born with a clubfoot deformity of the right foot. He and his family live in a small village close to the Somaliland border with Ethiopia.

The family are livestock herders like many other families in the area. They have 5 children including Sharmarke. Sulekha, his older sister was born with a bilateral clubfoot deformity and was treated by Diversity Action Network (DAN), a partner of Australian Doctors for Africa, in 2015.

Sharmarke was brought to DAN’s clubfoot clinic in Hargeisa in November 2021 when he was 7 months old.  Ponseti treatment was started and after 5 weeks of manipulation and weekly plasters, a tenotomy procedure was undertaken to maximize the correction. The tenotomy was done by an orthopedic surgeon based in Hargeisa Group Hospital, who was trained by ADFA.  Plaster castings continued, followed by the use of a prosthetic brace to prevent the recurrence of the deformity. The family now is back home and Sharmarke will be able to walk like any other child.

Sharmarke’s mother expressed her happiness when the child’s foot deformity was fully corrected. She has big plans for him in the future and wants Sharmarke to enrol in the local school when he reaches school age. Without the treatment provided by DAN, and supported by ADFA, children like Sharmarke would suffer life-long disability.

Photo caption: Sharmarke was born with a clubfoot deformity of the right foot.

News

Support for Damaged Ethiopian Hospital

Support for Damaged Ethiopian Hospital

Wollo University Dessie Teaching and Referral Hospital is the most important health facility in the Amhara region in northern Ethiopia with a catchment area of 10 million people. During the recent Ethiopian conflict, the hospital sustained significant damage and...

Infection Control Training for Ethiopian Nurses

Infection Control Training for Ethiopian Nurses

Australian Doctors for Africa arranged 4-day Infection Control Training Seminars for two rural hospitals in south west Ethiopia, Wolaita Sodo and Hossana, and soon to be a third in Hawassa. The training covers hand hygiene; standard precautions; sterilising, care and...

Continuing PPE Support for Health Care Workers in Madagascar

Continuing PPE Support for Health Care Workers in Madagascar

Australian Doctors for Africa recently provided a large quantity of PPE to Endoscopy Units at five hospitals in Madagascar. Supplies included 4,800 face masks, 35,000 gloves, 350 Tyvec jumpsuits and 40 face shields, which will help reduce the spread of COVID-19...