The No Pain project is a vital derivative of our work in Kenya that we have been doing for over a year.
In our coronavirus time, when doctors fail to curb the new pandemic, 27 thousands children in the world die every day from "old" diseases that doctors are able to treat. Kids are dying on the earthen floor of squalid huts. They’re dying for a long time, writhing in pain. They die from common measles, for example, because their parents have no money to invite a doctor.
During one of our trips to Kenya, we asked Agnes Wanjori, director of the Shelter Orphanage in Nairobi: “Children are probably not enough just to feed? They also need to be treated. What are your children sick with? " And we got an answer: “To be treated? Probably they need. But I have no idea what they are sick with - they have never been examined by any doctor in their life.” In the slums of Kibera, this question sounds completely strange. The word "sick" isn’t used there. The child is either alive or dead. Meanwhile, the absolute majority of child deaths can be prevented by the cheapest antibiotics and malaria pills.
Today, we send money to Kenya to buy soap, antibiotics, analgesics, anthelmintic and antimalarial drugs
In our coronavirus time, when doctors fail to curb the new pandemic, 27 thousands children in the world die every day from "old" diseases that doctors are able to treat. Kids are dying on the earthen floor of squalid huts. They’re dying for a long time, writhing in pain. They die from common measles, for example, because their parents have no money to invite a doctor.
During one of our trips to Kenya, we asked Agnes Wanjori, director of the Shelter Orphanage in Nairobi: “Children are probably not enough just to feed? They also need to be treated. What are your children sick with? " And we got an answer: “To be treated? Probably they need. But I have no idea what they are sick with - they have never been examined by any doctor in their life.” In the slums of Kibera, this question sounds completely strange. The word "sick" isn’t used there. The child is either alive or dead. Meanwhile, the absolute majority of child deaths can be prevented by the cheapest antibiotics and malaria pills.
Today, we send money to Kenya to buy soap, antibiotics, analgesics, anthelmintic and antimalarial drugs