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Progress of the works Gaurishankar hospital
in Charikot in the district of Dolakha.
07/2019
Nepal lives one
transition year after the
other. The reasons are
multiple, various,
natural like an
earthquake or rather of
a social nature. It is
always as pleasant to
stroll in Kathmandu or
Pokhara even if you
can anticipate that a
fundamental change is
setting up. More and
more shops are run by
Chinese people who
unwind their silk
skeins here in Nepal as
well as their silk road
to Europe.
Part of the equipment order at the end of 2018
and delivered at the beginning of 2019
Health Post
Kattike-Deurali
Room with beds for patients and
chair for dental treatments.
High temperature ovens to burn
medical waste.
Thank you in advance for your participation,
which allows us to help in an efficient and
sustainable way.
Namaste and sincerely yours,
Marie Anne Carier
Dear Madam, Dear Sir,
I would like to thank on behalf of all the members of the Board of
Directors for your support, voluntary work, financial and material
donations, the provided logistics. The association could not work
without your help and we are very grateful for this.
We would like to inform you with this flyer about our projects and
the development of the hospital in Dhulikhel and you will also find
reflexions of Miss Clarisse Houll about Nepal, our partner and our
mission.
Together shall we continue to offer a difference in the life of people who most need us all.
Maybe one day Yeti will note any more play hide-and-seek and we will also be honoured to see him in the
Dhulikhel hospital.
However, the Nepalese magic continues to work. The
Indian army recently declared having found tracks of
Yeti in the snow near the basis camp of Makalu in the
East of Nepal. Yeti, this giant creature looking like an
ape, is part of the South-Asian folklore. There is no
evidence that Yeti exists, but the myth of the
abominable snowman stays alive in the region Nepal,
India, Bhutan. In 2013, the searches of a British
researcher concluded that the legendary Himalayan
Yeti could in reality be a sub-species of the brown bear.
Propagation of a stupid myth to reality?
Yeti must not take us away from our medical and
sanitary preoccupation concerning the Dhulikhel
hospital that NepaliMed continues to strongly and
actively support thanks to your generosity and your
empathy.
The hospital’s mission remains unchanged:
Continue to supply the very poor with affordable,
but high-quality health services;
Continue to develop, to improve the current
services, the research, the education and the
medical practice,
Continue to build a solid network of health services
with external care centres and the surrounding
communities;
Continue to respond to the needy in times of
disaster;
Continue in the search of excellence for all services
and provide solutions for local problems.
The hospital’s objectives go hand in hand with a vision
of innovation. This strategy allows the hospital to take
up the new challenges of the worldwide health and the
medication.
Dhulikhel hospital’s management remains deeply
anchored in the partnerships with the hospitals,
research and development centres for the worldwide
health.
None of the works carried out until now could have
been possible without the dedication of each
participant, employee, colleague, student, patient and
donor.