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    '300 Lives in 30 Days' campaign raises $50k

    '300 Lives in 30 Days' campaign raises $50k

    Photo By Master Sgt. Nichelle Griffiths | Firuza Nurahunova, a 13-year-old Kyrgyz girl pictured on a fundraising campaign...... read more read more

    TRANSIT CENTER AT MANAS, KYRGYZSTAN

    05.24.2010

    Story by Staff Sgt. Carolyn Viss 

    376th Air Expeditionary Wing

    TRANSIT CENTER AT MANAS, Kyrgyzstan – An idea that started out as just a bike-a-thon to raise money for children's heart surgeries in Kyrgyzstan turned into a 30-day campaign culminating in the 24-hour "Bike Your Heart Out" event, May 18 and 19.

    During the bike-a-thon, more than 81 Airmen from the Transit Center at Manas biked more than 3,400 miles, and altogether, throughout the month, they raised more than $50,000 – enough to fund approximately 53 surgeries.

    "The bike-a-thon was the culminating event," said Master Sgt. James Gagner, 376th Expeditionary Mission Support Group first sergeant. "The biggest thing we did was our worldwide e-mail campaign to try to raise money, but we also raised money at the National Prayer Luncheon, a 'Heart Hop' at Pete's Place, a Cinco de Mayo celebration, and donation boxes throughout the installation."

    About 40 percent of that $50,000 was donated directly from the pockets of Airmen on the Transit Center, especially those who are a part of Manas Area Benefit Outreach society, the installation's biggest non-profit private organization. The rest was donated by the friends and family they contacted to get on board with this life-saving cause, he said.

    The MABOS heart surgery program began in 2005 by Mr. Jim Carney, a retired Army first sergeant with a passion for helping Kyrgyz children, according to a wing-wide e-mail by Lt. Col. Jason Janaros, the 376th Expeditionary Force Support Squadron commander.

    "Mr. Carney established a tremendous partnership with a local surgeon, Dr. Samidin Shabraliev," according to the e-mail. "As a result, Dr. Shabraliev agreed to donate his services for free if others would pay for a device called an oxygenator [mechanical lung], which costs $560. Since then, through charitable donations, MABOS has paid for 152 life-saving surgeries for Kyrgyz families."

    The surgeries are performed at the Heart Surgery and Organ Transplant Research Institute in Bishkek. They are able to operate on approximately 15 children a week and are only restricted from doing more surgeries by the space, equipment, and beds in the intensive care unit, where children spend their first two days after surgery.

    "The most common condition these children are born with is called Patent Foramen Ovale," according to Janaros. "All babies have a hole in their heart septum during development, but it closes in 80 percent of people before birth. For babies with PFO, the hole does not close and blood flows directly from the right side of the heart to the left side of the heart without ever going to the lungs for oxygen. The un-oxygenated blood is then pushed out to the body, resulting in a condition called hypoxia. Because the blood is not oxygenated, the body's cells are not receiving the oxygen they need to properly function. PFO is a birth defect, not a disease. Its cause is not yet fully understood, but it's known to be a congenital problem [genetic] and believed to be caused by prenatal living at high altitudes [such as Kyrgyzstan]."

    It is estimated that more than 600 children in Kyrgyzstan need this operation, and the number is growing every day.

    "Through your generous donations, each family will receive $1,000 to pay for the surgery and critical post-surgical medications," Janaros said.

    Like many other Americans, Gagner was amazed by how little it takes to save a life here.

    "When I heard it only cost $560, I thought somebody was wrong, that there should have been at least another zero added," he said. Of course, one major reason the expense is so small is that the doctor does it pro-bono, but even so, "I never thought it would be that low," he said.

    He was also amazed by how generous some of the lowest-ranking Airmen here were. One individual who stood out in his mind is an E-4 who anonymously made a pledge of $1,000, and the kick-off campaign last month was started by a staff sergeant and senior airman in the 376th Expeditionary Logistics Readiness Squadron.

    Gagner attributed the outpouring of generosity during the campaign to the fact that Airmen have been able to get out into the community and physically see and hear the needs.

    "It hits home," he said. "They're not just reading a brochure or reading it in the newspaper. We put together and worked on this fundraiser for the sole purpose of saving these kids' lives."

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.24.2010
    Date Posted: 05.24.2010 07:20
    Story ID: 50154
    Location: TRANSIT CENTER AT MANAS, KG

    Web Views: 145
    Downloads: 109

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