- Title: Gaza burn victims get 3D-printer face masks made close to home
- Date: 11th February 2021
- Summary: PHYSIOTHERAPIST PREPARING MASK VARIOUS OF PHYSIOTHERAPIST HELPING PATIENT PUT ON MASK (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) PHYSIOTHERAPY ACTIVITY MANAGER, ABED EL-HAMID QARADAYA, SAYING: "We are the only organisation that provides this mask in Gaza. Previously we used to make it through basic methods but in 2020 we brought a new method which is through using 3D printers in manufacturing them. As you saw, we can take the face prints that match exactly the face and based on those face prints we can print on the 3D printer and make the mask on the 3D printer."
- Embargoed: 25th February 2021 10:08
- Keywords: Burns COVID-19 Coronavirus Face masks Gaza Gaza City Palestinians
- Location: GAZA CITY, GAZA
- City: GAZA CITY, GAZA
- Country: Palestinian Territories
- Topics: Living/Lifestyle,Middle East,Society/Social Issues
- Reuters ID: LVA003DZ79F8B
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES
Ahmed Al-Natour was working at his Gaza market shoe stall when a fire started in a nearby bakery and swept through a crowd of shoppers last March.
Twenty-five people were killed and Natour, 34, suffered severe burns to his face and other parts of his body. Back home after months in hospital, he is venturing out wearing a therapeutic mask now being made locally for the first time.
Using a 3D scanner in its clinic and a 3D printer owned by a Gaza business, Medecins Sans Frontieres-France provides compressive masks for Gaza facial burn victims to help them heal and prepare some for reconstructive surgery.
The transparent masks are made of solid plastic materials imported from France that help soften tissues and prevent complications such as scarring.
"I feel comfortable when I wear it, and it relaxes the face. It is easy to use, and I go shopping while wearing it," Natour said, as he wore the mask fastened with elastic straps.
In the past, 3D masks were available for burn patients in Gaza only when they traveled to Jordan for reconstructive surgery.
Coronavirus travel restrictions have made such journeys difficult, with only two Gaza patients able to make the trip in 2020 compared with 25 in 2019.
Abed El-Hamid Qaradaya, MSF-France's physiotherapy activity manager in Gaza, said at one of the organization's clinics that the masks had made a major difference for some patients.
"We have made face masks for 23 patients since the middle of 2020, and they helped to transform their lives," he said.
(Production: Fadi Shana, Arafat Barbakh, Suheir Sheikh) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
- Copyright Notice: (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2021. Open For Restrictions - http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp
- Usage Terms/Restrictions: None