The medical charity by KHIDI and Yeson Voice Center for Rayana began on October 10, 2023 and completed on October 18, 2023.
Yeson Voice Center has participated in the Medical Charity Project hosted by the Ministry of Health and Welfare and organized by the Korea Health Industry Development Institute.
We treat diseases of underprivileged children in countries where the level of medical care is not high.
This is being implemented with the purpose of helping children regain their voices and giving them a better life and new dreams, and this practice of sharing also greatly contributes to promoting the excellence of Korean medical care to the world.
The 2023 Medical Charity Protject was carried out to Adebiyet Rayana (7 years old) of Kazakhstan, a patient with laryngeal papilloma.
A 7-year-old girl has had no voice since she was born. She wanted to have vocal cord stenosis surgery to restore her voice to normal before entering elementary school next year, but it was not easy due to her family's difficult financial circumstances. Yeson decided to support this surgery.
To improve the voice that is difficult to produce due to vocal cord stenosis caused by frequent recurrence of laryngeal papilloma -
She underwent “glottic stenolysis using a double rotatioal microflap.”
Yeson Voice Center promised continuous follow-up care, including continuous monitoring of the patients' condition through the coordinator in charge.
Yeson Voice Center has been treating 24 overseas children with incurable diseases free of charge since 2011, and the patients who returned to their home countries after receiving treatment expressed their gratitude through photos and videos of their healthy appearance after surgery. I'm telling you.
Dr. Hyung-tae Kim, the director of the Yeson Voice Center, said, “It is sad to see children suffering from voice loss due to recurrence even after multiple surgeries in countries where the level of medical care is not highly developed,” and added, “through the great opportunity of shared medicine, they received surgery in Korea and regained their health.” Seeing children recovering gives me strength. “I want to continue to give hope to many children,” he said.