Kids of Chornobyl Canadian Fund continues to send aid
Nineteen years later Kids of Chornobyl Canadian Fund carries on provide much needed aid and be an aid to the victims with the Chornobyl nuclear disaster. The most recent installment demands the shipment of $384,000.00CAD valuation on medical equipment to hospitals in three elements of Ukraine: Ivankiw, Kyiv and Lviv. This shipment coincides using the XIX anniversary in the world's worst nuclear disaster at Chornobyl on April 26th, 1986.
Ivankiw, located 35 km from the Chornobyl reactor, will be the primary site where inhabitants of villages and towns perfectly located at
abercrombie and fitch outlet uk the Chornobyl region were relocated following your reactor's explosion. The consequences of radiation are getting to be more evident during the last number of years, and also the Ivankiw regional hospital, which
http://www.rockoverfourty.com/ services 34,722 inhabitants, won't have each of the necessary equipment to identify and treat some conditions. In the year there are 959 deaths and 236 births, and 129 individuals were newly clinically determined to have cancers. Diagnostic and medical equipment weighing 2,400 kg is now being shipped by CCCF to Ivankiw, including neonatal incubators, an ophthalmoscope and otoscope, spirometers, tonometers, stethoscopes, blood pressure level cuffs, respirator masks, safety glasses, medical gowns, syringes, bandages, laboratory supplies, wheelchairs and walkers.
In Kyiv the Laboratory of Immunology in the Institute of traumatology and orthopedics gets an Olympus diagnostic microscope, that will let them conduct immunological tests on children and adults to diagnose bone illnesses secondary to radiation exposure.
Eight 'state-of-the-art' incubators are delivered to two neonatal hospitals in
hollister sale Lviv to help you facilitate the survival of premature infants.
The Children Of
hollister outlet Chornobyl Canadian fund surely could purchase medical equipment for your various projects throughout the generosity of our many individual donors, like the Kilimanjaro project undertaken by Bohdanna Zvonok of Montreal.