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Smile Project provides free surgeries to youths with birth defects

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  • Smile Project provides free surgeries to youths with birth defects

    PRESS RELEASE

    Cafesjian Family Foundation
    15 South 5th Street, Suite 900
    Minneapolis, MN 55402

    USA contact:
    Madlene Minassian
    [email protected]
    (818) 434-1725

    Armenia contact:
    Erik Grigorian
    [email protected]
    (+374) 99 00 25 30

    Smile Project in Armenia provides free surgeries to youths with birth
    defects

    Initiative is a collaborative effort of five non-governmental
    organizations and Ministry of Health

    MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota, and YEREVAN - The Smile Project, a
    private-public initiative that provides free reconstructive surgery to
    Armenian children and young adults with certain birth defects, is
    currently underway in Yerevan.

    The medical procedures are being performed by a team of surgeons from
    Smile Network International (SNI), a nonprofit organization that
    provides reconstructive surgeries and related healthcare services to
    impoverished children and young adults in developing countries.

    Between October 4 and 10, the SNI surgical team will operate on over
    50 patients from Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh suffering from
    congenital cleft lip and cleft palate. The team will perform
    additional surgeries in Spring 2009.

    The Smile Project is a collaborative effort of the Cafesjian Family
    Foundation's Public Health Outreach Program, Arabkir Medical Center,
    Fund for Armenian Relief, Hand in Hand Foundation (Nagorno-Karabakh),
    the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Armenia, and Yerevan State
    Medical University.

    Patients with cleft lip or cleft palate have difficulty eating,
    drinking, and speaking. As a result, they suffer from malnourishment,
    stunted development, and lethargy. According to the Cafesjian
    Foundation, such individuals are also shunned by society and often
    subjected to discrimination or abuse, given the stigma attached to
    their physical deformities.

    `The month of October brings new hope to Armenia through these
    life-changing reconstructive surgeries, as the children and young
    adults undergoing those procedures will now get a smile, and with a
    smile will come friends, opportunities, and a better life,' said
    Madlene Minassian, director of the Cafesjian Family Foundation's
    Public Health Outreach Program. `We can already see the impact of the
    operations on many Armenian lives,' Minassian continued. `It is an
    honor to be on the ground here in Armenia and witness the contribution
    of these organizations.'

    The Smile Project
    was initiated last year, when the Cafesjian Family Foundation and its
    longtime partner, the Hope for the City Fund, requested that SNI
    launch a mission in Armenia. In November 2007, Minassian hosted a
    delegation from SNI in Yerevan and helped it assess local needs. By
    May 2008, when the Cafesjian Family Foundation's Public Health
    Outreach Program began to lay the groundwork for the SNI mission, four
    nonprofit organizations as well as the Ministry of Health came on
    board. With their collaboration and support, the Smile Project was
    officially launched.

    The project is administered by the
    Cafesjian Family Foundation's Public Health Outreach Program, which
    organizes PR campaigns and disseminates information for raising public
    awareness of birth defects and project services, helps provide
    accommodations and transportation for the SNI surgical team, assists
    in identifying and registering patients for surgery, and oversees the
    implementation of the project. The SNI team's travel expenses are
    underwritten by the Cafesjian Family Foundation.

    Other components of the Smile Project are provided by the initiative's
    partners. The Arabkir Medial Center provides surgical suites and
    personnel for patient prescreening and surgeries. It also delivers
    pre- and post-operation care.

    The Fund For Armenian Relief covers the transportation, food, and
    accommodation costs of patients as well as a caretaker..

    The Hand in Hand Foundation acts as project liaison in
    Nagorno-Karabakh. It distributes information, raises public awareness,
    identifies and prescreens patients, and coordinates their travel to
    Armenia and participation in the project.

    As the initiative's education partner, the Yerevan State Medical
    University recruits local professionals who acquire new skills and
    knowledge by shadowing SNI team members during surgeries. The
    university also organizes lectures by SNI surgeons, with the purpose
    of contributing to local capacity-building with regard to cleft lip
    and cleft palate treatment.

    The Smile Project is endorsed by the Armenian Ministry of Health. `We
    appreciate the ministry's support, care, and gestures of goodwill,'
    Minassian said, and applauded the ministry for granting complimentary
    entry visas to the SNI surgical team. She added that the ministry has
    published material about the Smile Project and disseminated it
    throughout Armenia, in addition to contributing to the implementation
    of the project by providing its lists of registered patients with
    cleft lip and cleft palate..
    The Cafesjian Family Foundation, Inc., was established in 1996 by
    Gerard L. Cafesjian. The U.S.-based nonprofit organization supports a
    variety of Armenian causes in Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and the
    U.S. A primary focus of the foundation are the security of independent
    Armenia and the further development of a free, democratic society
    through economic development and the strengthening of the U.S.-Armenia
    relationship.

    The foundation's Public Health Outreach Program aims to help improve
    healthcare in Armenia by providing medicines, medical supplies, and
    equipment to public-health institutions and centers across Armenia and
    Nagorno-Karabakh. The program also seeks to continue to provide free
    surgical services through its partnership with the Hope for the City
    Foundation and SNI.

    The Fund for Armenian Relief provides short-term emergency relief and
    implements long-term programs for the economic growth and social
    development of Armenia. Among other projects, the fund operates daily
    soup kitchens and summer camps, awards scholarships and scientific
    grants, and builds irrigation systems. The fund's programs also
    include one-time reconstruction projects as well as ongoing projects
    such as the Vanadzor Old Age Home and the Children's Reception and
    Orientation Center.

    The Arabkir Medical Center, in Yerevan, provides a wide range of
    medical services including prevention, diagnostics, and treatment of
    various child illnesses, follow-up of patients with chronic diseases,
    as well as psychosocial and rehabilitation services.

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