THE STORY OF MOHSIN
Mohsin was abandoned in 1998 at Dar-ul-Sukun, a home in Karachi for mentally and physically handicapped children. He was unable to walk and close to death from malnutrition.

A spell in hospital restored
the real Mohsin, a perfectly normal little
boy with legs and feet which didn’t work but a wicked twinkle in his
eyes.


Mohsin could walk!

Now
Mohsin needed a new home, one where he could live a normal life and
achieve his
potential. In 2003 the Karachi SOS
Children’s Village, home to 160 orphans or abandoned children, took him
in.
Mohsin now has a Mama and foster brothers and sisters.

He goes to the SOS school and is amongst the top in his class.

Mohsin,
at 8 years of age, could walk but was lame and beginning to stoop more and more. Dr Ajit Kumer
Sarker, an orthopaedic surgeon and a Darlington Rotarian, asked to
see recent x-rays and diagnosed a serious problem with Mohsin’s spine.
Dr Riaz,
the Head of Orthopaedics at the Aga Khan, confirmed that Mohsin had kyphoscoliosis which is causing his spine to twist and
curve. Mohsin needed
surgery but it could not be done in Pakistan as the
facilities were not available
for delicate paediatric spinal surgery.
Mohsin
was referred to Great Ormond Street Hospital for Sick Children. Mr
Noordeen
confirmed that Mohsin needed urgent surgery to correct any deformity as
much as possible but, more importantly, an urgent anterior/posterior
fusion of the lumbar spine. If left untreated the deformity would progress and cause a lower limb
paraplegia.
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