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Page 22

3

rd

International Conference on

Health Care and

Health Management

Joint Event

&

November 04-05, 2019 | Prague, Czech Republic

6

th

International Conference on

Neuroscience and

Neurological Disorders

Journal of Public Health Policy and Planning | Volume 3

Notes:

Post rehabilitation impact on Syrian refugees with lower limb amputation through

post donation analysis and monitoring survey (NSPPL Reyhanli)

Andrea Patterson

Relief International, Turkey

Background:

Turkey hosts more Syrian refugees than any

other country. As of Sep2019, 3.6million Syrian refugeeswere

registered with the Government of Turkey (UNHCR). A large

number of the refugees have settled in Turkey’s southeastern

provinces of Şanliurfa, Hatay, Kilis, and Gaziantep. The 2019

Humanitarian Needs Overview (HNO) reports that 45% of

surveyed persons injured during the Syria crisis are expected

to sustain a permanent impairment (e.g. amputation, spinal

cord injury, brain injury). According to NHO 2017, 53% of

injuries were due to explosive weapons. Relief International

is supporting the National Syrian Project for Prosthetic Limbs

in Reyhanli (Turkey) in terms of organizational capacity

building funded by ECHO. Responding to the critical, lifesaving

rehabilitation needs among all refugees eligible for services

by the Government of Turkey. The center is providing

prosthetic devices to refugees with lower limb amputations

with capacity of 20-25 devices monthly. Nearly 80% of the

beneficiaries are war-related injuries, out of them 18% are

females.

Post rehabilitation impact on Syrian refuges with lower limb

amputation is seeking to collect and analysis of information

provides a gathered from the beneficiaries through surveys

and focus group discussions that includes quantity and quality

indicators that aim to monitor the functional improvements

by using functional Independence Measure and Amputee

Mobility Predictor during assessment, discharge and follow

up session after 45 days of discharge date.

Methodology:

The methodology for this assessment is based

on a mixed method design, which includes qualitative and

quantitative tools. The tools utilized to assess and measure

beneficiaries’ improvement. The universe sample is the

beneficiaries who received full prosthesis device in the first

quarter of 2019 and sample was 16 beneficiaries (with

confidentiality interval 95% andmargin of error 5%, and using

random sampling), but unfortunately survey team reached

only 11 beneficiaries.

Results:

RI plans to present the results of the post donation

analysis and monitoring survey. Results showed that all the

surveyed beneficiaries reported they were ready to use the

prosthetic devices and the majority of beneficiaries (82%)

using donated prosthetic devices after discharge, and 78%

of the respondents reported improvements in walking. On

the other hand, 73% of the surveyed beneficiaries said that

their prosthetic devices did not match their expectations, and

82% of the beneficiaries had some kind of problemwith their

devices after discharge.

Conclusions:

RI will utilize the finding of the survey to

adapt the technical and programmatic support to physical

rehabilitation centers supported by RI to improve in

performance, and to share this experiencewith other physical

rehabilitation centers in Turkey.

Speaker Biography

Andrea Patterson is the Country Director of Relief International in Turkey.

She is a humanitarian response worker with over 12 years of professional

work experience in managing complex program portfolios at post conflict

and humanitarian response settings. She has been working in assistance

for Syrian refugees in a variety of countries, overseeing innovative

programmatic activities and improving the lives of refugees. She holds a

Master of Science in Public Health, a Master of Arts in Human Security and

Peacebuilding, and a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science.

e:

andrea.patterson@ri.org