Clear Path International
Removing Obstacles that Stand in the Way of the Health, Safety, and Development of Children and their Families

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August 22, 2006

Clear Path International Introduces Hippos to Cambodia

Posted by: Imbert Matthee

The hippo never was indigenous to Cambodia. As far as we can tell from our natural history research, the large slick round animal comes from Africa. But that didn't stop us from introducing it to the young patients at the Angkor Hospital for Children in Siem Reap.

Our hippo donation came in the form of a pediatric exam table given to Clear Path by the Group Health Cooperative of Seattle last year along with about five container loads of other medical equipment and supplies the large health care chain no longer needed, ranging from OR tables, anesthesia machines, x-ray equipment, gurneys, exam tables, crash carts and so on.

Much of the Group Health donation went to the earthquake region of Pakistan and to a hospital in El Salvador, but we set many of the pediatric items aside for the children's hospital, thanks to a shipping grant from Universal Aide Society in Canada. Snoqualmie Valley Hospital also contributed items to the shipment. The other items we sent to Cambodia include an incubator, billy warmer, pediatric gurneys, an infant scale, cribs and surgical supplies.

Though the incubator and warming light may have greater practical healing power, the hippo was by "the biggest hit" among the children at Angkor hospital, said David Shoemaker, executive director. "It's being used all the time."

But the staff seems to like almost as much. When we toured the hospital and were introduced to everyone, Shoemaker only needed to say "these are the people who gave us the hippo" and there was an immediate smile and recognition!

The Angkor Hospital for Children is a bustling place in the center of Siem Reap, tucked between the Center market and some big hotels. It was started by a Japanese photographer who frequented the nearby temples of Angkor Wat and discovered the plight of the area's children suffering from HIV/AIDS, malnutrition, tropical diseases, tuberculosis, polio and other serious conditions. The hospital staff, which includes international volunteers, sees an average of 300 children per day and its annual patient load is up to 70,000.

Although somewhat overwhelmed by its load drawn from Siem Reap and surrounding provinces and an active outreach program, the hospital is so well run it is now training doctors, nurses and specialists in the government-funded public health sector.

Impressed with facility when I visited it last year, I decided to set aside the pediatrict items donated to us in the Seattle area with the help of a nurse from the Mukilteo area who had also visited to hospital. When I came across the hippo at Group Health I thought of the hospital immediately.

Little did I know it was going to be so popular that the hospital decided to buy several other exam beds shaped like animals, including an elephant, Shoemaker said. The elephant will delight the kids as well, though it may not surprise them as much as the hippo for we all know the lumbering large-footed, big-eared collosus with the trumpeting trunk is indigenous to Cambodia and regularly is seen at Angkor Wat giving rides through the park.

Posted by Imbert Matthee at August 22, 2006 10:17 PM
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