Sunday, 28 October 2018

Blog 29: The Physiotherapy House at Phelisanong, three years in the making


In 2016 I worked at Phelisanong  for 3 weeks out of the corner of hut, using a small wooden bench, a few plastic chairs and some toys I begged from Sentebale. The only physiotherapy equipment I had were 3 small Zimmer frames that I asked to be sent from Saint Angela’s children’s centre.
In 2017 I brought more physio equipment from the UK, including 2 posterior walkers and began to aspire to a bigger and more suitable space for physiotherapy. Somewhere safe to store my growing store of equipment, somewhere big enough for the children to play and do their exercises, and somewhere to be a permanent focus for physiotherapy at Phelisanong, even when I wasn’t there.  By chance the opportunity came with a bequest made by the late John Ellis, a member of the Dolen Cymru board.
I made a quote for a physiotherapy house and the idea gathered momentum.  I returned to the UK to raise money and organise equipment  for the prosed physio house. By chance a charity I had contact with, Action Ireland, agreed to ship this equipment out. In February 2018 I met this equipment in Lesotho and travelled with it to Phelisanong.      
Once at Phelisanong, supported by Dolen Cymru I liaised with a Lesotho builder and the physiotherapy house was started. When I left the roof was ready to be put on and by the end of April, the exterior was finished, however it had yet to be turned into the physiotherapy house I envisaged.
Back in the UK it was difficult to keep the momentum going, then in one day in May, looking on Facebook, I noticed a British builder had turned up at Phelisanong. He was keen to help to help disabled children and started to build a dormitory extension on the physio house. Mamello thought it would be good idea if the some of the children most involved in physiotherapy could sleep in an adjoining bedroom to help them to do their exercises daily basis.
I contacted the builder, Richard, on his return finding out he was part of a small charity, Africa’s Gift, and would be returning at the end of the year with a small team of builders to finish the dormitory block. I asked if he could also finish the physio house for me and arranged to go back with him.
…and so, I am hoping to meet Richard next week at Manchester airport, flying with him to South Africa, jumping in his hire truck and then driving to Phelisanong. What could possibly go wrong ?
I’ve never met him but feel that its all meant to be and is a great opportunity to finish the physio house and get it up and running.
Meanwhile Action Ireland have agreed once again to give me container space to take out physiotherapy equipment. The last 6 weeks have been a frenzy of tracking down the equipment I want, begging for freebies and getting some great bargains off eBay.
I’ve added 3 more posterior walkers to complete the set at Phelisanong. Special supportive seating, including two Panda seats, each seat worth more than £1000, one came free from stores, one was £85 off eBay. I have more than a hundred pairs of supportive ankle boots, free from the NHS’s overflowing stores of redundant equipment. Splints, orthotics, toys and assorted physio paraphernalia.
The lovely Steve is taking it all to Dublin at the beginning of November when I am in Lesotho. I have no idea how he will get it all in his small van, but fortunately he is the master of packing and I am very grateful for all his help. Hopefully I will catch up with the container equipment sometime in 2019.
My more immediate concerns are my rendezvous with Richard (who tells me he is short, fat and bald, so will obviously stand out from the crowd at Manchester airport), and trying to fit a walking frame, crutches , boots and various other physio equipment into my luggage allowance, while still having enough weight left over for my personal kit. Watch this space to see how it all goes. See you in Lesotho …






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