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A Jolt For Heart Health In Zangezur

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  • A Jolt For Heart Health In Zangezur

    A JOLT FOR HEART HEALTH IN ZANGEZUR

    Thursday, July 10th, 2014

    Dr. Karen Hambardzumyan and Nurse Gayane Babayan conduct an angiography

    GORIS, Armenia--Before Armenia Fund built a modern cardiology center
    in Goris, some people would have to drive hundreds of miles to get
    help in Yerevan. With the project now complete, residents of southern
    Armenia and Artsakh have world-class cardiac care close to home.

    It's only a slight discomfort at first. Then it gets worse. And worse
    still. It becomes hard to breathe. Your chest is so tight it feels like
    you're trapped underneath a rock. It's a heart attack and you need to
    go to the emergency room - every minute counts. But you're in Goris
    and the nearest cardiac emergency center is in Yerevan, 150 miles away.

    The lack of adequate medical care in areas outside of the capital
    city is an issue that Armenia Fund takes seriously. When it was
    evaluating different projects and realized that Syunik -- where
    Goris is located and the largest region of Armenia after Artsakh --
    did not have anywhere to properly treat heart disease, it went to work.

    Choosing to build a center that specializes in heart health was done as
    purposefully and deliberately as the construction of any Armenia Fund
    project: according to the World Health Organization, heart disease,
    the main cause of heart attacks, is the primary cause of death in
    middle- and low-income countries.

    Similarly, Goris was chosen because of its central location in Syunik,
    accessible to all parts of southern Armenia. It is also able to serve
    Artsakh more easily than any other location in Syunik because it is the
    origin of another Armenia Fund project, the Goris-Stepanakert Highway.

    Entrance to Goris Cardiology Center

    The two-story cardiology center was built to hold 16 beds and has a
    polyclinic which is able to accommodate up to 20 emergency patients a
    day. It is also equipped with central heating, a necessary feature for
    a building in the high-altitude - thus often cold - climate of Syunik.

    The facility was also equipped with state-of-the-art medical equipment
    imported from France; in Armenia, similar wares can otherwise only
    be found in Yerevan.

    Besides the structure, the Goris Cardiology Center was provided with
    ambulances to be used for emergency patient pick-ups. In addition to
    transporting patients to the Center, the ambulances work with the
    local emergency room at Zangezur Hospital to pick up patients that
    need other types of care and drop them off at the hospital.

    In the constantly developing world of biotechnology and medicine, the
    whole staff of the cardiology center is sent to France for extensive
    training. Additionally, the French Armenian Doctors Association sends
    experts among its ranks to provide onsite training to local doctors.

    Local and international doctors stay overnight in special rooms built
    for medical personnel, making them available 24 hours a day for any
    emergency cases.

    As important as urgent care is in treating heart disease, the best way
    to ensure a longer life for patients is through preventive care for
    at-risk patients and continued care for those currently suffering from
    the disease. The Goris Cardiology Center provides both preventive and
    continued care to those who need it while acting as an indispensable
    life support system for serious cases that need advanced medical
    attention in Yerevan or elsewhere.

    Although the Goris Cardiology Center provides high-quality healthcare,
    because it is serving a population that might not otherwise be able
    to afford it, the cost to patients is subsidized and any additional
    costs beyond what the patient is able to pay are covered.

    Goris, the rest of Syunik, and the whole of Artsakh have about 300,000
    people - about 10 percent of Armenia's population -- whereas these
    regions account for over half of Armenia's territory. True to its
    humanitarian mission, Armenia Fund built the cardiology center so
    that residents in this expansive part of the country would receive
    the medical attention they deserve, no matter where they lived. That's
    why when a person from Kapan, Syunik's capital, suffers a heart attack
    and is being rushed by an ambulance to the nearest appropriate medical
    facility, it doesn't zip past Goris, 45 miles away, to drive another
    150 miles to Yerevan. Today, the first stop for that ambulance is
    the new cardiology center. For the victim of a heart attack, every
    minute counts.

    http://asbarez.com/124860/a-jolt-for-heart-health-in-zangezur/

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