This video of the Mirror Therapy Workshop held on August 20, 2014 at Gihembe Refugee Camp, Rwanda is conducted in Rwandan.
However, enthusiasm for the procedure is captured on the faces of the participants.
Updates and reflections on Mirror Therapy and related non-invasive techniques to reduce or eliminate Phantom Limb Pain globally for amputees and the work of non -profit End The Pain Project to accomplish these goals.
Saturday, October 11, 2014
Friday, September 19, 2014
Vietnamese Amputee Demonstrates Effective Mirror Therapy at 5th Annual Cluster Munitions Convention in Costa Rica September 5, 2014
![]() |
Credit: Thao Griffiths |
Pham Quy Thi who lost his right hand and part of his right arm to a hidden landmine explosion, made the long journey from Vietnam to the Costa Rican Cluster Munitions Convention to demonstrate the use of ETPP Mirror Therapy as a means to diminish or end Phantom Limb Pain for amputees. Mr. Pham traveled under the auspices of Project Renew, Dong Ha, Quang Tri, Vietnam.
![]() |
Credit: Thao Griffiths |
Mr. Pham's demonstration totally captivated the attention of the Meeting of States delegates who attended his side event at the Convention on September 5, 2014. For further information about Mr. Pham shedding 36 years of Phantom Limb Pain through Mirror Therapy, please refer to the blog of December 5, 2013.
Monday, September 8, 2014
![]() | ||||||
Attendees at ETPP Mirror Therapy Workshop at Gihembe Refugee Camp, Rwanda |
The Workshop was attended by fifteen amputees and ten family members who will act as coaches for their kin in home-based therapy procedures.
![]() |
Amputee and Family Member Coach |
The participants, Rwandan refugees from the Congo, were each given a mirror and guided through a Mirror Therapy session by Jean Luc Ngarambe.
![]() |
Upper Limb Amputee Involved in Mirror Therapy |
![]() |
Lower Limb Amputee Involved in Mirror Therapy |
Friday, May 16, 2014
Mirror-Adria a registered Bosnian organization to offer Mirror Therapy Training Workshops
Mirror-Adria, a rehabilitation training group has been registered by physiotherapist Jasmin Adovic to address the problem of phantom limb pain for Bosnian amputees. Sarajevo alone, has over 50,000 people with permanent disabilities as a direct consequence of injuries from 1992-1995. This data does not include the numbers of wounded soldiers, including amputees who suffer with phantom limb pain.
Mirror-Adria,
endorsed by End The Pain Project (ETPP), will bring Mirror Therapy training workshops
to rehabilitation therapists in the Adria region as follows:
Bosnia - end of 2014
Montenegro - April 18, 2015
Serbia-May - June 2015
Macedonia - some time at the end of 2015
Montenegro - April 18, 2015
Serbia-May - June 2015
Macedonia - some time at the end of 2015
Graduates of the Mirror-Adria Training Workshops will receive Certificates of Completion issued by ETPP which will allow them to both administer mirror therapy and to train other professional therapists, amputees and family members or friends of amputees who suffer phantom limb pain.
![]() | |
Jasmin Adovic, founder of Mirror Therapy Adria at far left with graduates of the September 2013 ETPP Mirror Therapy Training Workshop |
Adovic recently created a FaceBook group, Mirror Therapy Adria. It has attracted over 500 members and more are coming, all with days of its inception!
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
An Old/New Prosthetic That Works
"The best designs and innovations come from people who refuse to accept the definitions and limitations set be others" says Mark Lesek, an amputee inventor. Mark lost his arm several years ago. Now his search for a better prosthetic could improve the lives of amputees everywhere.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4DDt30Aat4
Viewers can contact Mark at: mark@dynamicwelding.com
New Device Makes Wheel Chairs Obsolete
This device holds great promise for paraplegics and others confined to wheelchairs.
The TEK Robotic Mobilization Device is a machine developed to replace the wheelchair. In this demonstration video, we see a man with a severe injury to his spinal cord able to move about in ways that a wheelchair would make very difficult.
http://www.wimp.com/newdevice/
The TEK Robotic Mobilization Device is a machine developed to replace the wheelchair. In this demonstration video, we see a man with a severe injury to his spinal cord able to move about in ways that a wheelchair would make very difficult.
http://www.wimp.com/newdevice/
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)