View allAll Photos Tagged Orthopaedic
Last May, wheelchair basketball player and coach, Jess Markt conducted a week-long training session for patients at the ICRC's Orthopaedic Centre in Kabul. The patients had been playing basketball together for some time, but it was more like 'buzkashi' – the ferocious no-holds-barred local equivalent of polo – than basketball, according to Alberto Cairo, head of the ICRC's Orthopaedic programme. On the first day of training, Jess explained the basic rules of the game, watched by Alberto (standing right with glasses) and other members of the Ortho Centre staff.
© ICRC / Jessica Barry / www.icrc.org
Orthopaedic surgeon Dr Alvise Pasquini, looks over a patient’s x-rays in a tent just outside the new hospital in Sarthe, Haiti. Thousands were injured during the 7.0 earthquake that killed more than 200,000 people in January 2010. © Chip Somodevilla
The Hammersmith Hospital in London was built in the early years of the 20th century as the local workhouse; during the First World War it was used by the army, first being called the Military Orthopaedic Hospital and then Special Services Hospital.
This very nice image shows all the equipment needed for taking an X-ray, including the glass plate and gloves for handling the plate when developing the film.
The Hammersmith Hospital was a workhouse hospital, which became a specialist orthopaedic centre during the First War, under the charge of Sir Robert Jones. It claimed to be the 'first experimental hospital in training the disabled'. This card shows a group of soldiers, some of whom who could possibly have been gassed, rather than orthopaedic injuries alone. For more details, see:-
Three mature polio ladies have just been fitted with new boots they are being waited to be measured for KAFO braces. (AI Image)
Go to Page 115 in the Internet Archive
Title: Illustrated catalogue and price list of surgical instruments, spectacles, eyeglasses, optical goods, orthopaedical apparatus, trusses, supporters, etc. etc
Creator: Reynders, John, & Co., New York
Publisher: New York : Reynders
Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons and Harvard Medical School
Contributor: Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine
Date: 1889
Language: eng
If you have questions concerning reproductions, please contact the Contributing Library.
Note: The colors, contrast and appearance of these illustrations are unlikely to be true to life. They are derived from scanned images that have been enhanced for machine interpretation and have been altered from their originals.
Read/Download from the Internet Archive
This Invalid and Crippled Children's Hospital was founded in 1893 by the London Medical Mission Association, taken over shortly after by the Canning Town Women's Settlement. It served primarily as a children's hospital, provided orthopaedic are up to 1976, and is now demolished. This card was posted in 1909. For more information:-
In the Staffordshire moorlands, this was an orthopaedic hospital active until the 1980's, when services moved to the new Stafford District General Hospital.
www.sevenspots.co.uk/building/standon-hall-now-part-of-st...
www.search.staffspasttrack.org.uk/engine/resource/default...
Built in the 19th century by a local industrialist, this became an orthopaedic hospital, mostly for children with TB. More recently the National Trust has taken over and restored the gardens to their former glory.
Hidden and slowly decaying amongst beautiful gardens is St Gerard’s Orthopaedic Hospital. It was also used for the treatment of TB. Along the side of the wards are barn doors that would open and let the air in. It closed in 1988, and yet the leg braces, salt bath and letters from Mother Superior are left behind.
A speed camera on the Bristol Road South in Northfield. Near Manor Farm Park. Quite near the Royal Orthopaedic Hospital.
A documentary film and photo reportage shot over nine months, incorporating still image grabs and photographs, on the work carried out at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital in Stanmore, Middlesex, UK, and the patient's whose lives were changed by the hospital.
This film was made to help with the fundraising appeal for the hospital at it's launch on April 26, 2012. The film was premiered for the first time at this launch at an event hosted by HRH Prince Andrew and Princess Eugenie at St James's Palace.
To make donations to the appeal, please visit www.rnohcharity.org
To find out more about the creative team behind this project, visit www.taptv.co.uk
Watch this video on Vimeo. Video created by Edmond Terakopian.
Hidden and slowly decaying amongst beautiful gardens is St Gerard’s Orthopaedic Hospital. It was also used for the treatment of TB. Along the side of the wards are barn doors that would open and let the air in. It closed in 1988, and yet the leg braces, salt bath and letters from Mother Superior are left behind.
A documentary film shot over nine months, on the work carried out at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital in Stanmore, Middlesex, UK, and the patient's whose lives were changed by the hospital.
This film was made to help with the fundraising appeal for the hospital at it's launch on April 26, 2012. The film was premiered for the first time at this launch, at an event hosted by HRH Prince Andrew and Princess Eugenie at St James's Palace.
To make donations to the appeal, please visit www.rnohcharity.org
To find out more about the creative team behind this project, visit www.taptv.co.uk
Watch this video on Vimeo. Video created by Edmond Terakopian.
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Honoring a long career in orthopaedics and contributions to knee and hip replacement prostheses, the Larry S. Matthews, M.D., Collegiate Professorship in Orthopaedic Surgery was established in a September 30, 2013 ceremony. Jon Sekiya, M.D. (Residency 2001), professor of orthopaedic surgery, associate director of MedSport and team physician for the U-M Athletic Department, was installed as its first professor.
Pictured here: Matthews speaks to the audience in the Danto Auditorium, in the Samuel and Jean Frankel Cardiovascular Center, after receiving his medal from Dean Woolliscroft.
If you are looking for the orthopaedic treatment then you must visit anodyne spine fitlife clinic, a leading physiotherapy clinic in South Delhi. Anodyne has the best physiotherapist in Delhi who can treat your all the problems very effectively.
Read our blog: anodynespine.com/an-overview-of-orthopaedic-physical-ther...
Manipal hospital gives the best sports medicine to athletes & sports man. Our orthopaedic consultants in bangalore are expertise in providing physiotherapy & treatment for neck pain & back pain.
Workers Party representative Mick Crowley (centre) chats with James Coughlan and members of his family at start of protest against closure of Orthopaedic Hospital.
Orthopedic-Implants.net is a division of D4 Surgicals India Pvt. Ltd., manufacturer, supplier and exporters of orthopedic implants, spinal implants, pedicle screw set, spinal cage and spine instruments, etc from Mumbai, India.
I came back to Northfield, as I found out that there was a blue plaque on the building.
I knew that I couldn't take it right next to the building, so I tried from the crossing, but there was bushes in the way.
I then tried to get the plaque from the other side of the road. Had to go to digital zoom in one one (hard to get it in the centre).
It is at a site called The Woodlands. George Cadbury gave the house and land to the hospital in 1907.
From the above link:
In 1907, Mr. George Cadbury gave a house and land known as The Woodlands in Northfield to the Crippled Children’s Union. In 1925, the Royal Orthopaedic and Spinal Hospital and the Birmingham Cripples Union amalgamated and King George V approved the title “The Royal Cripples Hospital, Birmingham” being bestowed upon the Hospital. In the 1920’s and 1930’s, the Hospital was able to invest in outpatient facilities at Broad Street, inpatient facilities at the Woodlands and other convalescent facilities.
The building is Grade II listed.
The Woodlands at the Royal Orthopaedic Hospital, Birmingham
BRISTOL ROAD
1.
5104 (east side)
Selly Oak B29
The Woodlands at
The Royal Orthopaedic
Hospital
SP 08 SW 11/11
II
2.
Circa 1840, altered and added to. Given by George Cadbury in 1909. stucco;
slate roof. Two storeys; 3 bays demarcated by coupled pilasters, those at
the left and right exceedingly thin, those of the first floor all with little
volutes. Ground floor with central double door giving on to a small transverse
oval ante-room to the staircase hall, and 2 windows. First floor with 3
square windows. All windows sashes in eared moulded surrounds. Eaves cornice
and blocking course. To the left, a later unexplained circular painted brick
structure with circular windows with leaded lights, dentilled brick frieze
and low conical roof. Another similar circular structure at the back of
the house near the former stable court, now aid out as a garden with fountain
in the centre. The right-hand return with a modern addition and a door perhaps
altered from a 3-light window.
Listing NGR: SP0274780355
Blue plaque for Naughton Dunn. He was Birmingham's first orthopaedic specialist. He was at this hospital from 1913-1939.
From The Birmingham Civic Society in 2006.
I moved to the left, zoomed in again, but was hard to get it in the centre. This is a crop of the original shot (in digital zoom).
Got these in between two rain showers - the second one was heavier (by the time I left Selly Oak).
Sharon Higgins taking up signatures for petition against the closure of the Orthopaedic Hospital where she works. Sharon lives nearby and is a member of the Cork North West branch of the Workers Party.
Today I went to the Nuffield Hospital in Oxford to have a bone scan. Bit of a boring photo collage really, but it records the fact that I went. Many thanks to Carol for driving. x
Info: Canon S95.
Yeh, childrens orthopaedic hospital in its latter years no doubt but the place stuck me as being very similar to an earlier TB isolation hospital. The building appears older than some others on site and the two main ward rooms each had a wall of 'barn doors' that could open the whole ward up onto the gardens beyond.
I came back to Northfield, as I found out that there was a blue plaque on the building.
I knew that I couldn't take it right next to the building, so I tried from the crossing, but there was bushes in the way.
I then tried to get the plaque from the other side of the road. Had to go to digital zoom in one one (hard to get it in the centre).
It is at a site called The Woodlands. George Cadbury gave the house and land to the hospital in 1907.
From the above link:
In 1907, Mr. George Cadbury gave a house and land known as The Woodlands in Northfield to the Crippled Children’s Union. In 1925, the Royal Orthopaedic and Spinal Hospital and the Birmingham Cripples Union amalgamated and King George V approved the title “The Royal Cripples Hospital, Birmingham” being bestowed upon the Hospital. In the 1920’s and 1930’s, the Hospital was able to invest in outpatient facilities at Broad Street, inpatient facilities at the Woodlands and other convalescent facilities.
The building is Grade II listed.
The Woodlands at the Royal Orthopaedic Hospital, Birmingham
BRISTOL ROAD
1.
5104 (east side)
Selly Oak B29
The Woodlands at
The Royal Orthopaedic
Hospital
SP 08 SW 11/11
II
2.
Circa 1840, altered and added to. Given by George Cadbury in 1909. stucco;
slate roof. Two storeys; 3 bays demarcated by coupled pilasters, those at
the left and right exceedingly thin, those of the first floor all with little
volutes. Ground floor with central double door giving on to a small transverse
oval ante-room to the staircase hall, and 2 windows. First floor with 3
square windows. All windows sashes in eared moulded surrounds. Eaves cornice
and blocking course. To the left, a later unexplained circular painted brick
structure with circular windows with leaded lights, dentilled brick frieze
and low conical roof. Another similar circular structure at the back of
the house near the former stable court, now aid out as a garden with fountain
in the centre. The right-hand return with a modern addition and a door perhaps
altered from a 3-light window.
Listing NGR: SP0274780355
Blue plaque for Naughton Dunn. He was Birmingham's first orthopaedic specialist. He was at this hospital from 1913-1939.
From The Birmingham Civic Society in 2006.
First shot from the crossing in the middle of the road - two much foilage in the way.
Got these in between two rain showers - the second one was heavier (by the time I left Selly Oak).
Go to Page 306 in the Internet Archive
Title: Illustrated catalogue and price list of surgical instruments, spectacles, eyeglasses, optical goods, orthopaedical apparatus, trusses, supporters, etc. etc
Creator: Reynders, John, & Co., New York
Publisher: New York : Reynders
Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons and Harvard Medical School
Contributor: Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine
Date: 1889
Language: eng
If you have questions concerning reproductions, please contact the Contributing Library.
Note: The colors, contrast and appearance of these illustrations are unlikely to be true to life. They are derived from scanned images that have been enhanced for machine interpretation and have been altered from their originals.
Read/Download from the Internet Archive
L-R: Sal Paolantonio, National Correspondent, ESPN, Adrienne Kirby, President and CEO, Cooper University Health Care, Susan Bass Levin, President and CEO, The Cooper Foundation, Stephanie Conners, Senior Vice President of Hospital Operations and Chief Nursing Officer, and Lawrence Miller, MD, Chief, Orthopaedic Surgery and Medical Director, Cooper Bone and Joint Institute.
CERVICAL MUSCLES - STERNOCLEIDOMASTOID
Cervical Spine Muscles Sternocleidomastoid orthopaedic surgery presentations
DESCRIPTION
Sternocleidomastoid has two heads of origin.
ORIGIN
Sternocleidomastoid’s sternal or medial head originates from the upper part of the anterior surface of the manubrium sterni.
Sternocleidomastoid’s clavicular or lateral head originates from the superior surface of the medial third of the clavicle. orthopaedic surgery presentations.
INSERTION
Sternocleidomastoid inserts onto the lateral surface of the mastoid process from its apex to its superior border, and to the lateral half of the superior nuchal line by a thin aponeurosis.
INNERVATION
Sternocleidomastoid is innervated by the accessory nerve and branches from the ventral rami of C2, C3 and C4 spinal nerves.
BLOOD SUPPLY
The upper third of the sternocleidomastoid is supplied by branches of the occipital artery. The middle third of the sternocleidomastoid receives its blood supply from a branch of the superior thyroid artery (42%), the external carotid artery (23%), or branches of both (27%). orthopaedic surgery presentations. The lower third of the sternocleidomastoid is usually supplied by a branch arising from the suprascapular artery (>80%).
ACTION
Sternocleidomastoid acting alone will laterally flex to the ipsilateral shoulder while rotating to the contralateral shoulder.
Sternocleidomastoid acting together will draw the head forward and assist longus colli to flex the neck. If the head is fixed, they elevate the thorax during forced inspiration.
Cervical Spine Muscles Sternocleidomastoid orthopaedic surgery presentations
Kurt R. Weiss, M.D., director of the Musculoskeletal Oncology Laboratory and associate professor of orthopaedic surgery, Division of Musculoskeletal Oncology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, speaks at Rare Disease Day at NIH on Feb. 28, 2020.
Credit: National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
Funny how things go. Yesterday I found this horse, on Google Images, and prepared one of my favourite stories to post ... all to go along with the not-so-good news I expected to hear from the orthopaedic surgeon.
What a surprise! The news was far better than I could have imagined. While this Charcot's syndrome is still a VERY serious problem there is no surgery, for me, in the foreseeable future, if ever.
Dr Kostas Panagiotopoulos (a.k.a. Dr Kostas) says that the acute phase of this episode is coming to a close. I am stay off my foot, keep it raised as much as possible and wear that muckle big air boot all the time (even through the night) .... AND I am to see him again in five weeks.
I am thrilled. Sandra (chauffeur) and Mike (muscles) and i went out for lunch after the appointment and we laughed ourselves silly (or was that just me?). (After lunch Mike tried to push my wheelchair into traffic and then down some stairs. I wasn't laughing then.)
This story gives you my understanding of both welcome and unwelcome news. As happy as i am today I strive keep the Old Man and The White Horse in mind.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Old Man and the White Horse
Once there was an old man who lived in a tiny village. Although poor, he was envied by all, for he owned a beautiful white horse. Even the king coveted his treasure. A horse like this had never been seen before – such was its splendor, its majesty, its strength.
People offered fabulous prices for the steed, but the old man always refused. “This horse is not a horse to me,” he would tell them. “It is a person. How could you sell a person? He is a friend, not a possession. How could you sell a friend.” The man was poor and the temptation was great. But he never sold the horse.
One morning he found that the horse was not in his stable. All the village came to see him. “You old fool,” they scoffed, “we told you that someone would steal your horse. We warned you that you would be robbed. You are so poor. How could you ever protect such a valuable animal? It would have been better to have sold him. You could have gotten whatever price you wanted. No amount would have been to high. Now the horse is gone and you’ve been cursed with misfortune.”
The old man responded, “Don’t speak too quickly. Say only that the horse is not in the stable. That is all we know; the rest is judgment. If I’ve been cursed or not, how can you know? How can you judge?”
The people contested, “Don’t make us out to be fools! We may not be philosophers, but great philosophy is not needed. The simple fact that your horse is gone is a curse.”
The old man spoke again. “All I know is that the stable is empty, and the horse is gone. The rest I don’t know. Whether it be a curse or a blessing, I can’t say. All we can see is a fragment. Who can say what will come next?”
The people of the village laughed. They thought that the man was crazy. They had always thought he was a fool; if he wasn’t, he would have sold the horse and lived off the money. But instead, he was a poor woodcutter, and old man still cutting firewood and dragging it out of the forest and selling it. He lived hand to mouth in the misery of poverty. Now he had proven that he was, indeed, a fool.
After fifteen days, the horse returned. He hadn’t been stolen; he had run away into the forest. Not only had he returned, he had brought a dozen wild horses with him. Once again, the village people gathered around the woodcutter and spoke. “Old man, you were right and we were wrong. What we thought was a curse was a blessing. Please forgive us.”
The man responded, “Once again, you go too far. Say only that the horse is back. State only that a dozen horses returned with him, but don’t judge. How do you know if this is a blessing or not? You see only a fragment. Unless you know the whole story, how can you judge? You read only one page of a book. Can you judge the whole book? You read only one word of one phrase. Can you understand the entire phrase?”
“Life is so vast, yet you judge all of life with one page or one word. All you have is one fragment! Don’t say that this is a blessing. No one knows. I am content with what I know. I am not perturbed by what I don’t.”
“Maybe the old man is right,” they said to one another. So they said little. But down deep, they knew he was wrong. They knew it was a blessing. Twelve wild horses had returned. With a little work, the animals could be broken and trained and sold for much money.
The old man had a son, an only son. The young man began to break the wild horses. After a few days, he fell from one of the horses and broke both legs. Once again the villagers gathered around the old man and cast their judgments.
“You were right,” they said. “You proved you were right. The dozen horses were not a blessing. They were a curse. Your only son has broken both his legs, and now in your old age you have no one to help you. Now you are poorer than ever.”
The old man spoke again. “You people are obsessed with judging. Don’t go so far. Say only that my son broke his legs. Who knows if it is a blessing or a curse? No one knows. We only have a fragment. Life comes in fragments.”
It so happened that a few weeks later the country engaged in war against a neighboring country. All the young men of the village were required to join the army. Only the son of the old man was excluded, because he was injured. Once again the people gathered around the old man, crying and screaming because their sons had been taken. There was little chance that they would return. The enemy was strong, and the war would be a losing struggle. They would never see their sons again.
“You were right, old man,” They wept. “God knows you were right. This proves it. Your son’s accident was a blessing. His legs may be broken, but at least he is with you. Our sons are gone forever.”
The old man spoke again. “It is impossible to talk with you. You always draw conclusions. No one knows. Say only this. Your sons had to go to war, and mine did not. No one knows if it is a blessing or a curse. No one is wise enough to know.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Photo from Google Images
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IOH's state-of-the-art operating suites were created to make comfortable surgeries for patients and to ensure they receive the best care.
the front of today's protest against the closure of Cork's Orthopaedic Hospital which will close its doors for the last time on March 31st.
I came back to Northfield, as I found out that there was a blue plaque on the building.
I knew that I couldn't take it right next to the building, so I tried from the crossing, but there was bushes in the way.
I then tried to get the plaque from the other side of the road. Had to go to digital zoom in one one (hard to get it in the centre).
It is at a site called The Woodlands. George Cadbury gave the house and land to the hospital in 1907.
From the above link:
In 1907, Mr. George Cadbury gave a house and land known as The Woodlands in Northfield to the Crippled Children’s Union. In 1925, the Royal Orthopaedic and Spinal Hospital and the Birmingham Cripples Union amalgamated and King George V approved the title “The Royal Cripples Hospital, Birmingham” being bestowed upon the Hospital. In the 1920’s and 1930’s, the Hospital was able to invest in outpatient facilities at Broad Street, inpatient facilities at the Woodlands and other convalescent facilities.
The building is Grade II listed.
The Woodlands at the Royal Orthopaedic Hospital, Birmingham
BRISTOL ROAD
1.
5104 (east side)
Selly Oak B29
The Woodlands at
The Royal Orthopaedic
Hospital
SP 08 SW 11/11
II
2.
Circa 1840, altered and added to. Given by George Cadbury in 1909. stucco;
slate roof. Two storeys; 3 bays demarcated by coupled pilasters, those at
the left and right exceedingly thin, those of the first floor all with little
volutes. Ground floor with central double door giving on to a small transverse
oval ante-room to the staircase hall, and 2 windows. First floor with 3
square windows. All windows sashes in eared moulded surrounds. Eaves cornice
and blocking course. To the left, a later unexplained circular painted brick
structure with circular windows with leaded lights, dentilled brick frieze
and low conical roof. Another similar circular structure at the back of
the house near the former stable court, now aid out as a garden with fountain
in the centre. The right-hand return with a modern addition and a door perhaps
altered from a 3-light window.
Listing NGR: SP0274780355
Blue plaque for Naughton Dunn. He was Birmingham's first orthopaedic specialist. He was at this hospital from 1913-1939.
From The Birmingham Civic Society in 2006.
Second attempt from other side of the road. More readable but still foilage in the way.
Got these in between two rain showers - the second one was heavier (by the time I left Selly Oak).
protest against the closure of Cork's Orthopaedic Hospital which will close its doors for the last time on March 31st.
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Hidden and slowly decaying amongst beautiful gardens is St Gerard’s Orthopaedic Hospital. It was also used for the treatment of TB. Along the side of the wards are barn doors that would open and let the air in. It closed in 1988, and yet the leg braces, salt bath and letters from Mother Superior are left behind.