December 28, 2011 - Bolivian LIMBS Patient interviewed for Guardian Article
Happy Holidays from LIMBS International! We hope you have had a healthy and happy holiday season.
Recently, one of our patients from Bolvia was interviewed by the Guardian, a newspaper in the United Kingdom. The article is titled: Global development voices: Living with disabilities. Our patient Teddy was interviewed, and while neither our partnering clinic or our knee is mentioned explicitly, we can ensure you that Teddy is one of our happy Bolivian patients wearing the LIMBS Knee. You can view the entire article in its entirety here, or read the entire interview with Teddy below.
We couldn't be more excited with the progress our partners in La Paz have made in under one year. They have locally produced 50 LIMBS Knees for patients, and have fit over 30 patients in that time. They have been interviewed 4 times by local Bolivian media outlets, as excitement and awareness of the LIMBS Knee grows in Bolivia. They have shown great passion and drive towards fitting the destitute amputees of their country with high-quality, low-cost prostheses utilizing the LIMBS Knee, and we cannot wait to see what great steps they take forward in 2012.
The following excerpt is from the Guardian:
Teddy Hotto Quispe Velasco, 37, lives in El Alto, Bolivia
I just wanted to die after I had my amputation. I was hit by a speeding bus. Surgery couldn't restore mobility to my right foot, and then my leg got infected and had to be amputated. I had to walk with crutches, and suffered discrimination, even from my own family. They pushed me aside. I cried a lot, and even my children cried at the beginning. But I'm much happier now, after I got a prosthetic leg. People can't tell that I have a fake limb. I can walk normally, like before. And I got a job at a French bakery. They are even trying to check how I drive so that I can make deliveries. If I hadn't got a new leg, I don't think my life would have improved. It's difficult to live in Bolivia if you have a disability.
What steps are being taken in your country to improve the lives of disabled people? What policy or activity would you like to see your country introduce?
I wish the government would give financial help to disabled people, because they suffer a lot. People treat you differently. Even the way they look at you is different. They don't tell you straight to your face, but they don't want to get near you. After my leg was amputated, I suffered a lot of discrimination. I don't know what I would have done if it hadn't been for a lot of the support I got from some people, and the help I got from the Rotary Club, which gave me a free prosthetic limb.
What should the international community do to help improve the lives of disabled people in your country?
I can understand what they go through now. I'm not well-informed, but countries with more money should help Bolivia. And organisations like the Rotary Club should also help where the government can't. People with disabilities should get help, because they can't go to work. For example, buses don't stop for you if they see that you're an amputee, because they think you're going to take up more room with your crutches.