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Welcome Dr. Jay Eastman!

We are delighted to welcome Dr. Jay Eastman to the RAG4Clubfoot Board of Directors!  Dr. Eastman has had 40 plus years of general pediatric practice, 20 years of medical mission work, and 3 years of direct work with global grants as Foundation chair of District 6380. He joins the board in the new role of Technical Officer. 

The Rotary Foundation (TRF) Cadre is a group of volunteer Rotarians who possess professional expertise in Rotary’s areas of focus and assist TRF with the evaluation of Rotary grants. Involving Cadre members in Action Groups will increase the level of expertise in Action Groups. Therefore, the position of Technical Officer has been created and will be required for Action Groups by July 1, 2021.

RAG4Clubfoot is overjoyed to have someone with Dr. Eastman's qualifications join the board. Dr. Eastman is a practicing pediatrician at William Beaumont Hospital and the Children's Hospital of Michigan in Detroit, MI.  He is also Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Wayne State University School of Medicine.  He has been on many medical mission trips all around the world. Welcome Dr. Eastman!

New video tells clubfoot story

With the help and support of de Novo Marketing, a new video will share the story of clubfoot, Dr. Ponseti, Rotary and RAG4Clubfoot!  The wonderful team at de Novo took the vision of the RAG4Clufoot board and brought it to life.  Check it out here!  Many thanks for the entire team at de Novo for the inkind contribution to make this fit within our budget as well!

https://youtu.be/jD2dzoNL25c
 
Thank you to the Cedar Rapids Downtown Rotary Club for the $7,500 grant to support a new training program in Argentina! We had a gap of just $1,825 to complete the funding for this project and the City of Lakes Rotary Club in Minneapolis, MN stepped up to finish the match off!  We are so grateful for the support from both of these clubs to enable this project to move forward!

Book Review: ‘Lucky’s Feet’ by Thomas M. Cook
and Olayinka O. Adegbehingbe

Posted on Jan 22, 2021 by Genevieve Trainor

In the 1950s, the University of Iowa was the setting for groundbreaking work being done on the condition of clubfoot, a congenital deformity which causes an infant’s foot or feet to turn inward. When left untreated, the condition — which affects one in every thousand births, the vast majority of which are in developing countries — can make walking incredibly difficult and painful.

Dr. Ignacio Ponseti, a Spanish-American physician and faculty member at the UI, developed a method that has become one of the predominant treatments for clubfoot. The Ponseti Method is both nonsurgical and less expensive than other methods, which made it a boon for patients in countries that lacked resources.

In the 2019 book Clubfoot, locally published by Ice Cube Press, Thomas M. Cook, PT, Ph.D., a senior advisor to the Ponseti International Association and also a UI professor emeritus, explored Ponseti’s history and work. But the condition of clubfoot is most commonly treated in young children. So it seems inevitable that Cook published a companion to that history last year: Lucky’s Feet, a children’s book that takes a personal look at one boy’s experience with clubfoot and the Ponseti Method.

Lucky’s Feet comes out of the Coralville-based nonprofit Clubfoot Solutions, Inc., and was printed locally, too, at Tru Art Color Graphics in Iowa City (full disclosure: I also work for TACG’s sister company, Bankers Advertising). It’s a slim paperback lush with the beautiful watercolor illustrations of Iowa artist Jo Myers-Walker — a deeply Iowan effort from start to finish.

But it also benefits from Cook’s co-author, Olayinka O. Adegbehingbe, MD, a Ponseti mentee who heads the Orthopedic Surgery and Traumatology department at Obafemi Awolowo University in Ile Ife, Nigeria. It was Adegbehingbe who treated the deformities of the book’s protagonist, a young boy given the nickname As’ad, or “Lucky,” by his sister after undergoing the Ponseti Method to correct his clubfoot at age 8.

The book is told first person from Lucky’s perspective (although it is only based on his story, admitting to creative liberties taken). It covers the challenges of being born with a deformity in a developing country, where he was viewed as a burden to his family because of his inability to contribute.

He ends up living with his grandmother, who both cares for him and oversees his treatment. It details, accessibly, at a child’s level, the process of the Ponseti Method: the series of casts, changed weekly, that slowly adjust the direction of Lucky’s feet and enable him to walk again. It’s a warm, joyful story with end materials for parents that briefly go deeper into the method and Ponseti, and point to further resources.

Myers-Walker’s illustrations are the heavy hitters of Lucky’s Feet. The gorgeous colors bring Lucky’s landscape to life, and the tender treatment of the clubfoot condition reveal a generous and gentle approach. Altogether, it’s a sweet and simple book, perfect for older siblings of infants undergoing clubfoot treatment or for teachers looking to bring diverse personal stories into the classroom.

This article was originally published in Little Village issue 290.

Looking for an informative club program?  Invite RAG4Clubfoot to share with your members how Rotarians are impacting the lives of children born with clubfoot.  We are prepared to join via Zoom or other webinar platforms.

To schedule a RAG4Clubfoot presentation, please contact: info@rag4clubfoot.org
Argentina grant update
Rotarians of the Iowa City A.M. Club
by Nenu Piragine & Jim Peterson

In the first half of 2020, the Rotary Club of Iowa City A.M. (D6000, Iowa, USA) and the Rotary Club of Grand Bourg (D4905, Buenos Aires, Argentina) collaborated to apply for a Rotary Foundation Global Grant to help train Argentine orthopedists in the Ponseti Method.  In February the request was approved by The Rotary Foundation.

A Ponseti Method (PM) Training Seminar is planned to take place in Buenos Aires, Argentina, later this year. Seven pediatric surgeons from Argentina's Pediatric State Hospitals will be trained with the goal of eradicating untreated clubfoot in the country. The seven hospitals represented by the surgeons will establish Ponseti Clinics where the orthopedists will treat patients, counsel and support parents of children born with clubfoot and contribute information on cases and outcomes to the International Clubfoot Registry.

Argentina has a population of 44 million and the number of new cases of clubfoot per year is estimated to be 1,000. The number of children and adults in Argentina who live with untreated clubfoot is not known.

The sponsors for the Global Grant are the Rotary Club of Iowa City A.M. and the Rotary Club of Grand Bourg.  Those providing funds for the project include the Rotary Club of Cedar Rapids Downtown (D5970, Iowa, USA), City of Lakes Rotary Club (Minneapolis, MN), individual D6000 Rotarians, the Rotary Club of Grand Bourg, Rotary Districts 6000 and 4905, and The Rotary Foundation.  Primary Contacts for the Global Grant project are Nenu Piragine of the Iowa City A. M. and Elisa Oviedo of Grand Bourg.
Questions?  Contact: info@rag4clubfoot.org
Copyright © 2016-2020  RAG4Clubfoot, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you have shown an interest in RAG4Clubfoot and the activities Rotarians are implementing to train physicians in the Ponseti Method.

The Rotary Action Group, RAG4Clubfoot, is a group of Rotarians whose purpose is to mobilize Rotarians and provide global leadership to support timely Ponseti Method treatment and appropriate care for all children born with clubfoot. This Rotary Action Group operates in accordance with Rotary International policy, but is not an agency of, or controlled by, Rotary International.

Our email address is:
info@rag4clubfoot.org

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