Save a Child's Heart (SACH) is a humanitarian organization with a mission to improve the quality of pediatric cardiac care for children from developing countries who suffer from heart disease, and who cannot get adequate medical care in their home countries. It also works to create centers of pediatric cardiac competence in these countries, so these children can be treated at home. SACH was founded in 1996 and is based at the Edith Wolfson Medical Center near Tel Aviv, Israel.
Video Save a Child's Heart
Mission
The SACH mission is achieved in three ways:
- Providing life-saving cardiac surgery and other life-saving procedures for children from developing countries at the Wolfson Medical Center in Holon, Israel, near Tel Aviv;
- Providing an in-depth outreach post-graduate training program for medical personnel from these developing countries in Israel. They have trained doctors from Etheiopia, Tanzania and the Palestinian Authority to become pediatric cardiologists.;
- Sending staff overseas to provide this education to local medical professionals, as well as to perform surgeries side-by-side with them. They have sent numerous medical missions every year to many countries including Tanzania, Ethiopia, Zanzabar and Romania.
As of February 2018, SACH has brought more than 4,500 children to Israel from over 50 countries including Ethiopia, Gambia, Vietnam, Jordan, Moldova, Tanzania, Russia, the Philippines, Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Angola Iraq, Haiti, St. Vincent, Trinidad, Ecuador, Mauritania, Senegal, Côte d'Ivoire, Sierra Leone, Uganda, Congo, Zimbabwe, Zanzibar, Rwanda, Somalia, Eritrea, Sri Lanka, China, Kazakhstan, Romania, Ukraine, and Syria, as well as from Gaza and the West Bank (the Palestinian Territories). Approximately 50% of the children are from the Palestinian Authority, Jordan, Iraq and Morocco, more than 30% are from Africa, and the remainder are from Asia, Eastern Europe and the Americas. In December 2010 the first child from Indonesia was brought to Israel by SACH and underwent successful surgery in January 2011.
Medical personnel who have trained with SACH in Israel have come from China, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Moldova, Nigeria, Vietnam and Zanzibar, as well as from the Palestinian Authority. SACH has instructed hundreds of physicians and nurses during ove 60 medical missions to China, Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Jordan, Mauritania, Moldova, Nigeria, Russia, Ukraine, Tanzania, Romania, Vietnam and Zanzibar.
SACH's doctors and medical personnel completely volunteer their time and services for this project, with the only costs (about $10,000 US) used to provide post-surgical care at SACH's Children's Home in Israel for an average stay of about three months. Children are brought to Israel from their home country in groups of four to six, accompanied by a nurse or, if they are under age three, by a family member.
Save a Child's Heart Foundation U.S. has been certified by Independent Charities of America as one of about 2,000 "Best in America" charities, verification that its "fund-raising materials and other information to the public is truthful and non-deceptive" and that it provides "documented provision of substantive services." Save a Child's Heart Foundation U.S. has received the Independent Charities Seal of Excellence, awarded to the members of Independent Charities of America and Local Independent Charities of America that have, upon rigorous independent review, been able to certify, document, and demonstrate, on an annual basis, that they meet the highest standards of public accountability, program effectiveness, and cost effectiveness. These standards include those required by the U.S. Government for inclusion in the Combined Federal Campaign. Of the 1,000,000 charities operating in the United States today, it is estimated that fewer than 50,000, or 5 percent, meet or exceed these standards, and, of those, fewer than 2,000 have been awarded this Seal."
Maps Save a Child's Heart
History
Save a Child's Heart is the creation of Dr. Amram Cohen, and grew out of Cohen's experiences as a doctor serving with the U.S. Armed Forces in Korea in 1988, where he joined a program that helped poor local children with heart disease. The experience introduced him to a network of doctors doing similar work in developing countries, inspiring him to start his own program after moving to Israel in 1992. He brought three Ethiopian children to Israel for heart surgery in 1996, and then went on to make use of a network of professional and personal contacts to build a volunteer organization to help others for whom the operations were unavailable or too expensive.
Through a foundation he established, Save a Child's Heart, Dr. Cohen and other surgeons conducted hundreds of operations on children with congenital heart diseases, mostly at the Wolfson Medical Center, where Dr. Cohen was the head of pediatric cardiac surgery and served as Save a Child's Heart's chief surgeon.
Children were also brought from Nigeria, Tanzania, Congo, Moldova, Russia, Ghana, Vietnam, Ecuador, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority. Dr. Cohen and his team also traveled to China and Ethiopia to operate on about 60 children and taught medical staff there and in other countries. His foundation helped bring doctors and nurses to Israel for training, with the aim of creating centers for treatment of pediatric heart disease in their home countries. Dr. Cohen died on August 16, 2001, while climbing Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania. He was 47.
Since Dr. Cohen's death, SACH has continued its efforts to benefit children with life-threatening cardiac problems and to teach medical personnel in developing nations the surgical techniques needed to treat these young patients.
In 2006, SACH was selected as a featured charity by KLM Royal Dutch Airlines Air Cares program, with the airline showing a video of the charity's work on board its flights. The airline also donated EUR10,000 and donated free air miles to SACH.
In April, 2007, Israeli musician Idan Raichel traveled with Save a Child's Heart to Rwanda and Ethiopia.
In May 2011, SACH received recognition for special consultative status with the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) of the United Nations
In November 2011, a new children's home was inaugurated. The facility was built specifically to meet the needs of the young patients and staff and will allow Save a Child's Heart to house and treat a larger number of the children.
In June 2012, SACH received the Israeli Presidential Award for Volunteerism.
In July 2016, SACH saves its 4,000th child.
In January 2017, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited SACH
Surgeries performed in Israel
Save a Child's Heart has treated over 3,200 children from 45 developing nations in Israeli hospitals.
In 2013, amidst the Syrian Civil War, SACH conducted an open-heart surgery on a 5-year old Syrian girl. The pre-schooler, living as a refugee in an undisclosed country, traveled to the Wolfson Medical Hospital in Holon to receive the treatment. She was the first Syrian child to receive the free medical care and surgery.
SACH is embarking on its biggest project yet, to build an International Pediatric Cardiac Center (IPCC) at the Wolfson Medical Center (WMC), which will serve as a Children's Hospital. The IPCC will be a worldwide center of competence in pediatric cardiac care with international recognition in pediatric cardiac treatment, training and research. It will serve as a model for other SACH centers of competence in developing countries. This new state of the art child oriented medical facility will house all of the infrastructure and equipment needed to perform pediatric heart surgeries, including all pre and post-operative care.
International activities
China - On November 16, 2008, a Save a Child's Heart (SACH) training and surgical mission left for Shijiazhuang in the Hebei Province in China. This was SACH's 8th mission to China where its medical teams have saved, with Chinese colleagues, more than 100 Chinese children.
Angola - On May 3, 2009, a Save a Child's Heart medical team left for Luanda, Angola, to examine and screen Angolan children. The team examined 88 children. Among them were children who had been treated in Israel and needed a follow up examination.
Moldova - On November 11, 2007, a SACH team arrived in Kishinev, Moldova, to work with a team of local pediatric cardiologists. The mixed surgical group examined children and performed surgeries for five days.
Tanzania - In August 2011, a SACH team of Doctors, Nurses, Staff and Volunteers traveled to Tanzania to the Bugando Medical Center to work alongside local partners. During this Mission SACH, together with the local partners screened 300 children and performed 12 surgeries on Ethiopian children. A week later, a team of SACH volunteers, doctors and staff climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in an effort to raise $1M to save the lives of African children in need. As of January 2018 there have been 7 medical missions to Tanzania.
Romania - In 2017 there were two missions to Romania in March and November. During these missions Israeli doctors traveled to help assist Romanian medical staff in performing over 11 life saving heart procedures as well as performing their own procedures.
Zanzabar - There have been 6 medical missions to Zanzibar since 2008 the most recent being in February 2017. Save a Child's Heart (SACH) sent an all-women's mission to Zanzibar in mid-February 2017 to screen and diagnose children in need of life-saving heart surgery. SACH worked with its medical partners at the Mnazi Mmoia Hospital in Zanzibar to conduct screenings and determine which children are in need of heart surgeries. Throughout the mission, there were a total of 270 children in Zanzibar screened.
SACH Photo Exhibit Tours the Globe
Since 2008, a photo exhibit of SACH activities has been presented in cities around the world, including Abuja (Nigeria), Brussels, Detroit, Glasgow, Hebei (China), Jerusalem, Johannesburg, Melbourne, Miami, Moscow, Philadelphia, Quezon City (Philippines), Singapore, Sydney, Toronto, Vancouver and Washington, DC.
References
External links
- Save a Child's Heart - website
- Idan Raichel's report of a trip with SACH
- Israeli Doctors Treat Iraqi Patients
Source of the article : Wikipedia