Children Hear the World for the First Time

Sarkis, 2, sits in his mother's lap after surgery and is all smiles as we waves goodbye to the AIM Fund United States team.
Alex, barely 2-years-old and this year's youngest patient, with Shake, 3, playing in the hospital hallways after their surgeries.
Dr. Akira Ishiyama with Shake and her mother a few days after Shake's surgery.
Gagik, 3, is showered with love from his uncle after Gagik's surgery.

BY CHRISTINA NERSESIAN

This past summer, the Armenian International Medical (AIM) Fund, a nonprofit organization specializing in implementing integral health care programs in Armenia, successfully completed a total of 10 cochlear implant surgeries during their 14th consecutive medical mission abroad, making it the most out of any trip to date. Spearheaded by the dauntless Salpy Akaragian, RN-BC, MF and Founder and President of the AIM Fund, Co-Founder of the Cochlear Implant Project and Director of International and Nurse Credentialing at UCLA Health, AIM Fund has completed over 85 surgeries since the organization began in 2003.

With the continued support from Dr. Akira Ishiyama, Professor in the Department of Head and Neck Surgery at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, this year a group of 10 children and youths from villages and towns throughout Armenia received cochlear implants, with one individual undergoing ear surgery, at the Erebuni Medical Center (MC) located just outside Yerevan. This facility is a specialized center and the only place for cochlear implant surgeries in Armenia, coming in second after Russia.

As Vice President of the AIM Fund and Co-Founder of the Cochlear Implant Project, Dr. Ishiyama has donated his time and volunteered his professional services to the cause since its inception alongside Akaragian and their entire United States team. Other foundation members and supporters also came to support and manage this year’s efforts, including Kristine Oganyan RN; Nicole Baghdasaryan; Dr. Lucy Huckabay RN, PhD; Betty Nersesian RN and Len Nersesian among others. Since the United States team works entirely as volunteers, every penny collected and donated to the foundation was used for the purchase of cochlear implants with the goal to give even one more child the gift of hearing and this year’s efforts were wholly fulfilled. Since the beginning, a staggering number of children born with impaired hearing in Armenia have come through the Ear, Nose, and Throat (ENT) Department at the Erebuni MC in Yerevan and have left with the ability to listen and hear their world.

With these truly vital donations and by the generosity of Armenians and non-Armenians throughout the United States, AIM Fund continues to operate in its 12th year as an entirely nonprofit group. During this trip, they funded a majority of the implants for children from the ages of 2- to 5-years-old who were born hard of hearing and two adults who had lost their hearing within the past 12 months. These families came from different regions throughout Armenia, arriving from remote villages as far as Echmiadzin and Tavush, nearly 100 miles away from the Erebuni MC. The surgeons, physicians and nursing staff, both from Erebuni MC and those who traveled as a part of the mission staff, worked tirelessly throughout the process, yielding entirely successful surgeries and implants to their patients. One month after the week of their surgeries, the “switch onâ€

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