Gazprom pererabotka Blagoveshchensk has helped to purchase medical equipment for the rehabilitation center in Svobodnensky district
Andrey Belousov, Deputy General Director of Gazprom Pererabotka Blagoveshchensk, visited Amur Rehabilitation Center for Children and Adolescents with Disabilities called «Bardagon». Rehabilitation center employees demonstrated medical equipment purchased at the company's expense.
«To have a decent future, children must get adult care, a good education and, of course, be medically fit,» Andrei Belousov emphasized. «I hope that the equipment purchased for Bardagon Center will help many children to heal up and keep their health.»
Among the purchased equipment is the following: blood laser illumination device, aerosol inhalers, ion and magnetic therapy devices, an oxygen cocktail machine, musculoskeletal disorder suits, components for the transcranial micropolarization device used for treatment of children who have suffered a stroke.
«We have long dreamed of renovating medical equipment, so this help from Gazprom Pererabotka Blagoveshchensk turned out to be very important and timely,» said Yuri Shashov, Director of the Center. «We were unable to purchase the required electronic magnetic therapy device and other medical devices without support.»
Справка
Gazprom Pererabotka Blagoveshchensk LLC (part of the Gazprom Group) is the investor, owner and operator of the Amur GPP construction project. Amur GPP will become one of the world's largest natural gas processing plants. Its design capacity amount to 42 billion cubic meters of gas per year. The plant will consist of six production lines, with the first two planned to be commissioned in 2021. In addition to the purified methane fraction, the GPP commercial products will include ethane, propane, butane, pentane and hexane fraction, and helium.
«Bardagon», which is located near Svobodny, is the only rehabilitation center for children with disabilities in Amur region. 60 children recover here during the shift. The center's services are also used by adults, in particular, parents of young patients.
Enlarged photo (JPG, 597 KB)