9-Guerre [Mode de compatibilité]

Transcription

9-Guerre [Mode de compatibilité]
24/07/2014
30 ans du CERAH
Paris
Du droit à la réparation à la réhabilitation
Réinsertion des corps mutilés :
une nouvelle réhabilitation ?
12 juin 2014
Pr. Bernard Andrieu
Faculté du sport Université de Lorraine
bernard.andrieu@staps.uhp-nancy.fr
Philosophe
http://leblogducorps.over-blog.com
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Plan
• Le contexte technologique des amputés des
guerres américaines (Irak, Afghanistan)
• L’utilisation nationaliste : les amputés
présidentiels/providentiels
• L’agentivité des acteurs : La réinsertion
associative et caritative
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Nombre d’Amputés
• As of July 2009, 1,112 American soldiers
sustained an amputation in the Iraq war; 112
in the Afghanistan conflict, according to the
DOD's most recent count
• http://warriorchampions.com
• http://woundedwarriorproject.org
L'industrie prothétique américaine
• A travers cet exemple, l’analyse porte sur les
amputés de la guerre en Irak s'élevant à environ
600 sur une population totale de 1,9 million
d'Américains ayant perdu un membre, l'industrie
prothétique américaine estime que les
investissements du gouvernement se verront
moins dans leurs résultats financiers que dans les
progrès techniques réalisés.
Avec la guerre
en Irak la recherche sur de nouvelles prothèses
aux Etats-Unis a été mise en œuvre.
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DARPA/ HANGER
• L'armée et le département des Affaires des anciens combattants
(VA) financent de plus en plus de prothèses et de prestations liées.
Le VA, qui offre une prise en charge tout au long de la vie pour les
vétérans, a dépensé 1,1 million de dollars (800.000 euros) l'an
dernier dans ce domaine contre 529.000 dollars en 2000.
• Par le passé, les guerres ont conduit à des avancées en matière de
prothèses. La société Hanger a d'ailleurs été fondée en 1861 par un
amputé de la guerre civile américaine, James Hanger, qui a fabriqué
une jambe artificielle améliorée en bois, caoutchouc et métal. Le
fondateur de la société allemande Otto Bock Healthcare, premier
fabricant mondial de prothèses, "était un peu considéré comme le
Henry Ford de l'industrie prothétique" pour avoir produit à grande
échelle des appareils pour les anciens combattants de la Première
Guerre mondiale, souligne Brad Ruhl, au siège nord-américain de
l'entreprise à Minneapolis.
Développement
de meilleures prothèses.
• Le Pentagone a ainsi chargé un groupe de scientifiques
et des fabricants de mettre au point un bras artificiel
contrôlable par la pensée, un projet de 30 millions de
dollars (22 millions d'euros).
• Au total, les départements américains de la Défense et
des Anciens Combattants ont débloqué au moins 70
millions de dollars (51 millions d'euros) depuis 2001
pour le développement de meilleures prothèses. Des
dizaines d'entreprises, américaines ou étrangères, ont
reçu des fonds pour inventer ou perfectionner des
prothèses qui serviront d'abord aux soldats blessés
avant d'être utilisées par les civils amputés.
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Agentivité corporelle
• Dans le droit fil des travaux sur l’hybridation
technologique dans le handisport et dans
l’émergence de l’agentivité corporelle des
acteurs de guerre, nous étudions ici comment
politique, communication de guerre,
technologie définisse une restauration
idéologique par le sport.
Une médiatisation politique
• La restauration idéologique des amputés par
des prothèses, depuis les premières prothèses
d’Ambroise Paré, s’inscrit désormais dans le
handisport à travers une médiatisation
politique et des associations handisports des
amputés de guerres animées par les vétérans
eux-mêmes : operationamped et ampsurf.
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L’intégration des hybrides
•
•
•
•
L’intégration des hybrides dans la société par la médecine réparatrice fera
disparaître le handicap dès lors que la norme du corps naturel ne servira
plus de paradigme à la surnaturation de la performance et de l’action.
La stigmatisation des handicapés cache la réalité de l’hybridation actuelle
des greffés, implantés, bioniques, ipodés, prothésées…
Cette hypocrisie sociale révèle la difficulté d’adhérer à la nouvelle
condition humaine d’un être hybride biotechnologique.
L’intégration des hybrides : Vers une disparition du handicap", par Bernard Andrieu. dans J. Gaillard ed., 2007 Pratiques sportives et handicap, Lyon,
Ed Chronique sociale
Ethique de la mixité
• Ne plus séparer les
valides et les handisports dans un
séparatisme
olympique renforçant
l’invisibilité sociale
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« Regardez-moi dans les yeux ». On connaît
la musique et pourtant, cette fois,
Wonderbra n’est pas derrière le slogan. Il
s’agit plutôt de Cap 48, le Téléthon belge qui
récolte des fonds en faveur des handicapés.
Tanja Kiewitz est belle. Très belle. Elle n’est
pas mannequin mais pose en soutien-gorge
sur les affiches de Cap 48. Un détail fait
mouche : la jeune femme ne cache pas son
handicap. Une campagne percutante qui vise
à changer le regard des gens sur « la
différence ». Parce qu’en Belgique, le
handicap est la deuxième cause de
discrimination. « Il faut que l’on voit que je
suis avant tout une femme qui peut aussi
être belle et sexy, et que le handicap est
secondaire. Je voulais confronter les gens à
cette ambiguïté de la beauté et du handicap
», explique Tanja Kiewitz.
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Kelly Knox
• A young woman born with no left forearm is on the brink of a major
modelling career after winning a TV search for a top disabled
model.
• Kelly Knox, 23, of Enfield, beat hundreds of contestants to be
crowned Britain's Missing Top Model.
• A BBC Three series followed the progress of the eight finalists. Miss
Knox will now appear in a fourpage spread in Marie Claire after a
photoshoot with portrait photographer Rankin, who numbers Kate
Moss, Kylie Minogue and Tony Blair among his subjects.
• The final episode next Tuesday will show her having a casting with
model agency Take 2 and reveal whether they take her on.
• The 5ft 8ins credit controller, said: "I was never bullied but disability
is complex and some people have a hard time so seeing this could
be an inspiration for them. That's why I've done it."
Britain's Missing Models: Sophie, Debbie, Kelly,
Jessica, Kellie and Rebecca
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Jessica could be paralysed at any time
Determined: Debbie Van der Putten has also posed for Playboy
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Esther Vergeer, Tennis
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Naked Cripple Ballet (NSFW)
To make their point they've just released their calendar for 2011, featuring twelve French
men and women who are not afraid to show their disabled body. The calendar's theme is
"différents comme tout le monde" (different like everybody), and it targets both the
general public as fellow handicapped "who often don't accept their own body".
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La nudité sur un calendrier… le stratagème a fait ses preuves pour attirer le regard de
l'autre. Pourtant cette fois-ci pas de « Dieux du stade » ou des belles de Pirelli sur
papier glacé. Le corps est ici exhibé d'une autre manière. Surtout pour une autre
cause. À Puteaux dans les Hauts de Seine, douze handicapés ont posé nus pour un
calendrier 2011 publié par l'Association des paralysés de France (APF) afin de «
changer le regard des gens sur le handicap ».
Les motivations des huit modèles se rejoignent. Celle d'Arno est de « montrer le corps
handicapé de façon brute, sans se soucier des canons de la beauté académique,
chimérique, qui parcourt et cristallise une image falsifiée d'un corps standard ». Assis
nu dans un fauteuil roulant, Florian Kermezian, 21 ans, dit espérer que « désormais les
valides vont pouvoir nous regarder d'un œil différent ».
Priscille Vincens, 36 ans, amputée d'un bras et des deux jambes à la suite d'un
accident de train en 2006 a accepté de poser « pour accepter son nouveau corps ».
Quant à Cécile Arfi, la jeune photographe qui les a mitraillés tout le mois d'octobre
dernier, elle résume d'une phrase la démarche en estimant « que l'on peut être beau
et digne en étant différents des autres ». Un premier tirage de mille calendriers «
Différents comme tout le monde » est en vente sur le site de l'APF.
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La délégation départementale des Hauts-deSeine de l’Association des paralysés de France
(APF92) a dévoilé son calendrier pour l’année
2011. Comme Cal’handis en 2010, l’APF92
propose un calendrier dans lequel les
personnes handicapées posent nues.
Selon Cyrille Bertin, président de la délégation
des Hauts-de-Seine, « le corps est trop souvent
un élément de rejet ou de jugement si nous ne
rentrons « pas dans les normes de beautés
actuelles. Nous avons voulu faire prendre
conscience à tous, que le corps doit être un
vecteur d’épanouissement ou d’intégration et
non une cause de mal être et d’exclusion
d’une personne ».
http://lamourhandicape.over-blog.com
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L’association Cal’Handis a édité fin 2009 un
calendrier de photographies de nus artistiques
avec pour modèles uniquement des personnes de
divers handicaps. Ces modèles, hommes et
femmes, ont posés nus pour ce projet, seuls ou en
couple, afin de montrer qu’un corps différent et
hors-normes peut être beau et pourquoi pas
désirable, même et peut être encore plus en
s’offrant dans sa nudité....
Encouragé par un très bel accueil de la part du
public et des médias de notre travail, nous avons
décidé de nous lancer dans de nouveaux projets
pour les mois à venir, et de prolonger ainsi notre
message en faveur de la différence. Ainsi, nous
préparons actuellement un livre de témoignages
et de photos sur le thème du handicap et de la
sexualité. D’autres projets sont également
envisagés pour le futur.
Le calendrier 2010 est toujours en vente au prix
de 12€ l’unité sur ce site.
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AFI Silver is collaborating with VSA--the
international organization on arts and
disability--to present the International
Disability Film Festival, which will
include a wide selection of outstanding
films by and about people with
disabilities from all over the world.
The film festival is part of the 2010
International VSA Festival, taking place
in theaters, museums, cultural
institutions, and public spaces
throughout the Washington
metropolitan area, and bringing
together more than 2,000 participants
from around the globe.
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Alison Lapper’s website
http://www.alisonlapper.com/
“Alison Lapper Pregnant” by Marc Quinn.
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in Marie Claire UK
• in Marie Claire UK. The premise of the show seems cruel and
unusual to the core—to boost the acceptance of disabled women in
an industry that is based solely on physical perfection. Can you say
“pleading for rejection and humiliation”? This merciless irony plays
out in the show over and over again. A photographer says of
contestant Rebecca, a 27-year-old with a prosthetic leg, “Rebecca’s
disability didn’t cause me any problems. It was just the fact she’s
not really in shape.” So, aside from learning to model with a
prosthetic leg, Rebecca must also be crazy thin? And it gets worse.
In a scene where a contestant with a stump models lacy lingerie in a
store window, a young man comments, “She’s beautiful, so she’s
got nothing to hide.” But a middle-aged woman adds, “But if it’s to
sell something like lingerie I think people are going to be troubled.”
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The concept “immaculate” from Hans
Alexander Huseklepp explores the idea of
turning a handicap into a high-performance,
cybernetic fashion statement”.
San Francisco-based artist Tanya Vlach lost
an eye in a car accident in 2006 - now she's
planning to replace her standard-issue fake
eye with a webcam. Preferably wireless - and
with a 3x zoom
"I am attempting to recreate my
eye with the help of a miniature
camera implant in my prosthetic /
artificial eye. The intraocular
installation of an eye-cam will
substitute for the field of vision of
my left eye that I lost in 2005 from
a car accident. While my prosthetic
is an excellent aesthetic
replacement, I am interested in
capitalizing on the current
advancement of technology to
enhance the abilities of my
prosthesis for an augmented
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Aimée Mullins/ Pentagon
• Mullins was born with fibular hemimelia (missing fibula
bones) and, as a result, had both of her legs amputated
below the knee when she was a year old. She is a graduate
of Parkland High School in Allentown and Georgetown
University in Washington, D.C.
• While attending Georgetown University, she competed
against able-bodied athletes in NCAA Division I track and
field events. She competed in the Paralympics in 1996 in
Atlanta, in which she ran the 100-meter dash in 17.01
seconds and jumped 3.14 meters in the long-jump.
• Also while at Georgetown, Mullins won a place on the
Foreign Affairs internship program, working at The
Pentagon. She also makes appearances as a motivational
speaker
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Il s’agit du triple champion paralympique sur 100, 200 et 400 mètres : Oscar
Pistorius. Né à Johannesburg en 1986, le nouveau visage d’A*men est
devenu sprinter de classe internationale en courant avec des prothèses en
fibre de carbone.
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Les capteurs collés sur la poitrine de Claudia Mitchell relayent
vers la prothèse les messages partis du cortex moteur cérébral.
The Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago (RIC), demonstrated its remarkable engineering
and rehabilitation science know-how earlier this week by introducing Claudia Mitchell,
the first woman to be successfully fitted with RIC's Bionic Arm technology
Image © Keystone
Kathy Stubblefield, OTR/L,
watches patient Claudia
Mitchell as she conducts
functional testing with the
six-motor neuralcontrolled prosthesis.
Photograph courtesy of
the Rehabilitation
Institute of Chicago.
Image © Keystone
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Association de réintégration
• Wounded Warrior Integration
DS USA Executive Director Kirk Bauer estimates 1,000
wounded warriors and 600 family members have been
helped through the project since it started in the fall of
2003. Bauer states that the focus of the WWDSP has
become integration.
• “Some programs have been specifically designed for
the veterans, but we have found the disabled veterans
have enjoyed it more when they are integrated into our
regular programs,” he says. He also emphasizes that
the project’s integration expands to the
servicemembers’ families and the public spaces where
most of the programs take place.
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Wounded Warrior Project
www.woundedwarriorproject.org.
• The Wounded Warrior Disabled Sports Project is
conducted by Disabled Sports USA in partnership with
Wounded Warrior Project
www.woundedwarriorproject.org. WWDSP provides
year-round sports programsmembers from the Iraq
and Afghanistan conflict and the global war on
terrorism.
• The “Wounded Warriors” and their family members
are provided these opportunities free of charge,
including transportation, lodging, adaptive equipment
and individualized instruction in over a dozen different
winter and summer sports.
A New Attitude Toward Veterans
• A New Attitude Toward Veterans
Bauer sees a huge change in attitude since he returned
from Vietnam in 1969 as a single leg amputee.
• “The programs, opportunities, and choices are much
more diverse now. DS USA currently has 92 chapters in
37 states. Each chapter sets its own agenda and
activities. These may include one or more of the
following: snow sports (snow skiing, snowboarding,
and Nordic skiing); water sports (water skiing, sailing,
kayaking, scuba, outrigger canoeing and rafting);
cycling; climbing; horseback riding; golf; shooting;
athletics; tennis; other sports; and social activities.”
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to achieve integration
• Adaptive equipment, knowledgeable
instructors who know how to adapt the
activity and use the equipment, and accessible
facilities to run the program. He said when all
three are in place you have the ability to
achieve integration physically, socially, and
with the community. Unless a program is
integrated at these levels, he sees it as falling
short of its mission and having less of an
impact.
Giving Back to Wounded Warriors
• Giving Back to Wounded Warriors
These cyclists want to give back. The Soldier Ride helps to raise
awareness for the Wounded Warrior Project. Even though the
soldiers have already given so much, they want to confer a positive
message to the public and encourage the next group of wounded
soldiers.
• In 2004, the first year of the ride, $1 million was raised. Last year,
the ride raised $12 million. The funds help the Wounded Warrior
Project, a nonprofit organization dedicated to assisting the new
generation of severely injured servicemen and women.
• Many of these men and women have been physically active
throughout their lives and are not going to lose that. They are going
to get on the bike and prove to themselves, “I can still do this.''
Soldier Ride is not about the politics; it's not about the war; it's
simply about the soldiers.
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WARRIOR CHAMPIONS tells the inspiring story of a group of American soldiers
who lost limbs or suffered paralysis during their tours in Iraq. Rather than giving
in to depression, they’re actively combating a new enemy: their own bodies.
The film follows veterans Kortney Clemons, Scott Winkler, Melissa Stockwell,
and Carlos Leon as they fight to get in shape for the 2008 Paralympic Games in
Beijing. Kortney is a sprinter and long-distance jumper with one leg who has
written a book about his life at war and in sports. Scott is a paralyzed discus
thrower who travels around motivating other disabled veterans and kids.
Melissa completed the New York City Marathon less than a year after losing her
leg. Before deciding to train as a swimmer for the Paralympics, she had never
swum competitively. Carlos survived a year in Iraq as a Marine, only to break his
neck in a diving accident when he got home. He’s now a passionate discus and
shot put thrower. WARRIOR CHAMPIONS is an uplifting testament to the
strength of both body and spirit.
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Wounded Warrior Project
•
•
•
•
•
•
One night while watching the evening news, a group of veterans and brothers
were moved by the difficult stories of the first wounded service members
returning home from Afghanistan and Iraq. They realized then and there that
something needed to be done for these brave individuals beyond the brass bands
and ticker tape parades.
The resulting objective was to provide tangible support for the severely wounded
and help them on the road to healing, both physically and mentally. What had
been initially viewed as a small contribution (compared with what the warriors had
sacrificed while serving our country) has become WWP's signature program:"WWP
backpacks delivered bedside to wounded warriors."
Wounded Warrior Project is a nonprofit organization
Read more:
http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org/content/view/415/876/#ixzz0yp1ryCSu
Team of Wounded Warriors Scale Mt. Kilimanjaro
Reed Hoffman/Disabled Sports USA
Climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro, one of the world's highest
peaks, is an accomplishment in itself. We invite you to
meet a team of wounded warriors who scaled the peak
with a combination of five prosthetic legs. Injuries didn't
slow down this inspiring crew!
Want to hear more? Watch an interview with Dan
Nevins, one of the climbers and a WWP team member,
and then take a look at our Facebook page to see what
others are saying about the climb.
Read more:
http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org/#ixzz0yp0LtMOy
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Les amputés du Vietnam
• Manifestation contre la guerre
Vietnam Veterans Camp Out on East Potomac Park Légende
d'origine: WASHINGTON: Bill Wyman (left), of Boston, and Kim
Dehlin, of Mississippi who lost their legs in Vietnam, camp out on
East Potomac Park 4/18, Wyman and Dehlin are here for a series
of antiwar demonstrations sponsored by the Organization of
Vietnam Veterans Against the War.
IMAGE :
© Bettmann/CORBIS
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Titre :
Home With Honour
Légende :
6th April 1973: Two
amputees take part
in a parade through
Times Square in New
York City, to
commemorate the
end of the Vietnam
War and honour
those who took part
in it. (Photo by Peter
Keegan/Keystone/Ge
tty Images)
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Brown, P. W. 1970. Rehabilitation of
bilateral lower-extremity amputees. J.
Bone Joint Surg. 52:687-700.
At the beginning of the second winter, December
1968, however, one combined above-knee and
below-knee amputee was so insistent that the
possibilities of skiing were explored for him.
Lucks, the instructor, fitted with bilateral double
upright braces with locked knees and ankles, was
able to demonstrate that controlled skiing was
possible using only hip and trunk control. The
amputee was then fitted with a type of stubby
prosthesis for each lower extremity, and in these
he learned to ski (Brown 1970). Enthusiastic
about his skiing, in his first season he learned to
ski on expert trails and even participated in
slalom and downhill races. Mounting and
dismounting the chair lift with rigid knees and
ankles required courage and agility, but he
managed and soon was able to accomplish this
without interruption of the lift operation. Several
other bilateral amputees, all above-knee
amputees, learned to ski in the same fashion,
and most did better on skis than they did with
ambulation in their “normal” above-knee
prostheses (fig.55).
REHABILITATION OF THE
COMBAT-WOUNDED
AMPUTEE
Colonel Paul W Brown, MC,
USA (Ret.)
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ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY IN VIETNAM
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, UNITED STATES ARMY
SURGERY IN VIETNAM
ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY Editor for Orthopedic Surgery
Colonel WILLIAM E. BURKHALTER, MC USA (Ret.)
By
Colonel ANTHONY BALLARD, MC, USA (Ret.)
Colonel PAUL W. BROWN, MC, USA, (Ret.)
Colonel WILLIAM E. BURKHALTER, MC, USA, (Ret.)
Colonel WILLIAM W. EVERSMANN, Jr, MC, USA, (Ret.)
Colonel JOHN A. FEAGIN, Jr, MC, USA, (Ret.)
Colonel GERALD W. MAYFIELD, MC, USA, (Ret.)
Colonel GEORGE E. OMER, MC, USA, (Ret.)
OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL AND CENTER OF MILITARY HISTORY
UNITED STATES ARMY
WASHINGTON, D.C., 1994
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, UNITED STATES ARMY
The volumes comprising the official history of the Medical Department of the United States
Army in Vietnam are prepared by the U.S. Army Center of Military History and published
under the direction of the Surgeon General and the Chief of Military History. These volumes
are divided into two groups, (1) the professional, or clinical and technical, and (2) medically
related subjects. This is the third volume of the former group; the first two volumes are
entitled "Skin Diseases in Vietnam, 1965-72," and "General Medicine and Infectious
Diseases."
Marines Honoring Bob
Wieland A USMC honor guard
welcomes Bob Wieland, a
Vietnam veteran who lost both
legs, to Washington and the
Vietnam Veterans Memorial,
where Wieland was making a
statement about the economic
plight of some in this country.
IMAGE :
© Wally McNamee/CORBIS
DATE DE LA PHOTOGRAPHIE
mai 1986
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Bob Wieland Walking for
Hunger Bob Wieland, a
Vietnam veteran who lost
both legs, made his way
across the country to draw
attention to the economic
plight of certain
Americans. He pushes
himself along the sidewalk
at the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial.
IMAGE :
© Wally McNamee/CORBIS
DATE DE LA
PHOTOGRAPHIE
mai 1986
Handicapped Veteran At
Vietnam Memorial Légende
d'origine: 11/11/1985Washington, DC: A veteran
in a wheelchair
accompanied by his son at
the Vietnam Memorial on
Veteran's Day.
IMAGE :
© Bettmann/CORBIS
DATE DE LA PHOTOGRAPHIE
11 novembre 1985
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PHOTOS BY DREW
PERINE/STAFF
PHOTOGRAPHER
Jim Martinson, 63, of
Puyallup test-drives a
specially designed cart
available to veterans at
the redesigned American
Lake Veterans Golf Course
on Tuesday. Martinson,
who lost his legs in the
Vietnam War, says he
appreciates the
accessibility features of
the course.
Read more:
http://www.thenewstribu
ne.com/2010/04/21/1156
682/a-course-of-theirown.html#ixzz13FlRgtgF
Eugene Roberts, a veteran of the Vietnam war and double amputee,
has just completed a 3,100 mile run across America.
Roberts used specially-designed artificial legs to accomplish t
his marathon mission which he hopes will be
an inspiration to veterans and persons with disabilities.
U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs - 810 Vermont Avenue,
NW - Washington, DC 20420
Reviewed/Updated Date:
November 10, 2009
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Les amputés présidentiels
• Eviter le syndrome de la contestation de la
guerre par des Amputés non prothésés en
fauteuils protestants
• Communiquer sur des amputés providentiels
qui sont soutenus par l’armée et ses hôpitaux
pour représenter la nation
• S’afficher avec les amputés pour
communiquer une solidarité organique.
First ‘Bionic Soldier’
• September 03, 2003 - WASHINGTON,
September 3, 2003 -- Changes in body armor
have reduced the number of American service
members dying on the battlefield for about a
decade — although it still happens, a majority
of combat wounds military doctors treat
involve the extremities.
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Emerging prosthetic technologies
• Emerging prosthetic technologies promise not only greater power
and flexibility but also pressure-sensitive artificial skin, and even
limbs that are bonded to the body and controlled by the mind - and
much of this within five years. Rebuilding amputees to be faster and
stronger than before is rapidly becoming a realistic possibility. With
experimental prosthetics increasingly able to integrate with flesh,
bone and the nervous system, the very idea of "losing a limb" may
one day become obsolete.
"This is perhaps the most exciting time ever to be involved in
advanced prosthetics," says John Bigelow of the applied physics
laboratory at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, who
works on brain-controlled robotic arms.
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The $43,000 bionic leg,
complete with microprocessor
knee and force-sensing pylon -metal support rod between the
knee and the prosthetic foot -reads feedback data 50 times
per second and evaluates it to
determine the appropriate
movement for the computer
aided leg.
The C-Leg takes much less energy when McNaughton
walks.
“Sometimes it’s hard to explain, because you have to
be an amputee to know the difference. But [the C-Leg]
is so much smoother. It tries to imitate exactly what
the left leg is doing,” McNaughton said. “I can take
more natural steps. With this one you can go down
ramps a lot easier. With the [conventional prosthetic]
you have to go down sideways.”
•
Upper-limb prosthetics, however, have lagged behind. This is in part because arm and
hand amputations are less common than those of lower limbs, and also because arms
are smaller and have a greater range of movement than legs, making it more difficult to
pack in the hardware needed to mimic a real arm. This too is changing, as ever smaller
components become available.
Perhaps the smallest and most powerful yet is the i-Limb from British company Touch
Bionics in Livingston, West Lothian. It's a lightweight plastic hand in which each digit
contains its own motor and can move independently in response to signals from two
sensors attached to skin elsewhere on the user's body. These sensors pick up
"myoelectric" signals - the electrical impulses that cause muscles to contract. Users
move the hand by tensing certain muscles in a particular way to initiate preprogrammed grip patterns. For example, one pattern lets users hold a key between the
thumb and the index finger, and another makes the hand point with the index finger.
The hand also boasts a "stall detector" system that stops the hand contracting further
once it has sufficient grip on an object.
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DARPA has pledged almost $50 million
•
According to user John German, who lost his left hand to a congenital
nerve condition, people frequently mistake his i-Limb, covered with a
realistic silicon "skin", for a real hand. Even so, some users - particularly in
the military - prefer the "Terminator look" of the naked device, so the
company now also offers clear coverings.
Entire bionic arms are also in development. The Luke Arm has been
developed by the creator of the Segway transporter, Dean Kamen, at the
medical technology company Deka based in Manchester, New Hampshire.
It was financed by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA): troubled by the growing ranks of war veterans returning from
Iraq and Afghanistan having lost limbs to bombs, DARPA has pledged
almost $50 million in research funds towards the creation of a realistic,
thought-controlled bionic arm.
President Visits Injured
Soldiers
WASHINGTON JANUARY 17: President
George W. Bush and
first lady Laura Bush
visit with Staff Sgt.
Michael McNaughton at
Walter Reed Army
Medical Center January
17, 2003 in Washington
D.C. McNaughton was
wounded January 9 in
Afghanistan. The
president and first lady
visited four other
wounded soldiers at the
hospital.
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[July 11, 2005] Sergeant Joey Bozik, with his
wife Jayme and mother Gail, met President
Bush and Senator Elizabeth Dole.
Runners include Sgt.1st Class Michael
McNaughton, who made headlines when he
ran a mile with President George W. Bush in
2004.
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President Bush, second left, is seen on the field with Cincinnati Reds catcher
Jason LaRue (23) and, from left to right: Sgt. Mike McNaughton, who lost his
right leg and two fingers in Afghanistan;
Sgt. Paul Brondhaver who was shot in Iraq and received the Purple Heart and
Bronze Star with Valor; and John Prazynski, whose son Taylor was killed in
action in Afghanistan; after Bush threw out the first pitch during the Cincinnati
Reds opening baseball game against the Chicago Cubs in Cincinnati, Ohio,
Monday, April 3, 2006. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak ) April 04, 2006
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Double amputee Sgt. Christian Bagge prepares to jog with President Bush, June 2006.
Christopher Morris / VII for TIME
President George W. Bush runs with U.S. Army Staff Sergeant
Christian Bagge, 23, of Eugene, Ore., on the South Lawn
Tuesday, June 27, 2006. President Bush met Sgt. Bagge at
Brooke Army Medical Center Jan. 1, 2006, where he promised
to run with Sgt. Bagge. Since then, Sgt. Bagge has reenlisted to
active duty. White House photo by Eric Draper
Photo credit: AP Photo/Ron Edmonds
Copyright ©2007 pajamadeen.com
President Bush jogging on the South Lawn of the White House on
Wednesday with amputee soldiers is supposed to be inspiring…instead, we
find it kind of tasteless of Dubya to capitalize on the soldiers’ injuries for a
“photo op.” Sgt. Neil Duncan lost both of his legs in Afghanistan in 2005,
while Spc. Max Ramsey lost his left leg in Iraq last year.
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In this edition of Profiles in
Courage, we will take a look at
one such Army Spouse story, that
of Kim McNaughton, wife of Mike
McNaughton.
Angel Barcenas couldn't have imagined he could be
training like a world class athlete.
That's when an insurgent bomb in Iraq nearly killed him.
(Abc News)
Barcenas is just one of more than 600 who have lost their limbs in Iraq.
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30
September
2009
Gunnery Sergeant Angel Barcenas, a double amputee from combat in Iraq, leads a
formation of Marines from
the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, firefighters, and police offficers through
Manhattan to the World Trade Center sie.
BOSTON - APRIL 20 : Marines and soldiers run in full 50 pound packs in solidarity with 15
amputee soldiers competing in the marathon during the Boston Marathon April 20, 2009
in Boston.
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Army Capt. Dan Luckett, 27, of Norcross,
Ga........ takes a seat at Combat Outpost
Ashoqeh, Afghanistan. Luckett lost his left
leg and part of his right foot in a bomb
blast in Iraq in 2008. The Pentagon says 41
American amputee veterans are now in
sept 2010 serving in combat zones
worldwide.
Able to do intensive sports
• “Luckett’s remarkable recovery can be attributed
in part to dogged self-determination. But
technological advances have been crucial:
Artificial limbs today are so effective, some warwounded like Luckett are not only able to do
intensive sports like snow skiing, they can return
to active duty as fully operational soldiers. The
Pentagon says 41 American amputee veterans are
now serving in combat zones worldwide”.
• http://www.militarytimes.com
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Moving: Barack Obama hugs double-amputee Iraq war veteran Tammy
Duckworth 12th November 2008
after they placed a wreath at a veterans memorial in Chicago yesterday
America will serve you as well as you
have served your country
•
•
•
•
Let us rededicate ourselves to keep a sacred trust with all who have worn
the uniform of the United States of America: that America will serve you
as well as you have served your country,' Mr Obama said in a statement.
'As your next commander-in-chief, I promise to work every single day to
keep that sacred trust with all who have served.'
The president-elect, who will inherit wars in Iraq and Afghanistan from Mr
Bush, was accompanied by Tammy Duckworth, an Iraq war veteran who
lost her legs in combat.
'Since 9/11, a new generation of American heroes has borne a heavy load
in facing down the threats of the 21st century, and their families have
been asked to bear the painful absence of a loved one,' he said.
•
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article1085048/Obamas-hug-amputee-Iraq-war-veteran-America-honours-wardead.html#ixzz13CWD9zi5
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Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1085048/
Obamas-hug-amputee-Iraq-war-veteran-America-honours-war-dead.html#ixzz13CVsAaP3
Thu Apr 30, 2009
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IT WAS a hero’s welcome for amputee soldier Anthony Makin when he came face to
face with the Queen.
The Lance Bombardier, who lost a leg in Afghanistan, met Her Majesty as she formally
opened a new Army barracks at Larkhill, Wiltshire.
Anthony was chosen by his regiment, 29 Commando Royal Artillery, to present the
Queen with a special engraved silver vase.
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AW2 Director Lt.
Col. Gregory
Gadson took over
leadership of the
Army Wounded
Warrior Program
on July 13.
But Lt. Col.
Gadson is not
your typical
commander.
“As an alumni of AW2’s support, I
know first-hand the value that the
Army Wounded Warrior Program
brings to the long term success of
wounded soldiers. This is the
perfect place for me to serve, and I
am honored to have this mission,”
said AW2 Director Lt. Col.
Gadson. “For our severely wounded,
ill and injured soldiers and veterans,
AW2 provides an umbrella of
expertise that helps foster
the independence that leads to longterm success. For me,
AW2’s personalized support led to
my continued service in the Army.”
For more information about the
program, you can visit the
AW2 website, or check out the
program’s blog at
http://aw2.armylive.dodlive.mil/.
Corporal Garrett S.
Jones, an amputee who
was injured in 2007 by
an insurgent’s bomb
during his unit’s
deployment to Iraq,
shows his prosthetic leg.
Jones is a 23-year-old
Newberg, Ore., native.
(Marine Corps photo by
Sgt. Ray Lewis)
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The new ward at Birmingham’s super-hospital, currently the Queen Elizabeth site in Edgbaston, will have up to 36 beds
Read More http://www.birminghammail.net/news/top-stories/2008/07/04/city-boost-in-care
Lance Corporal Jonathan Lee who hopes to take part in the Fastnet Race
Lance Corporal Lee, 27, is back on his feet, with the help of a prosthetic limb, after recovering from the explosion in which he thought
he was going to die and which shattered the bone and muscle in his right leg.
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The new outpatient center.
•
•
•
•
Walter Reed Army Medical Center has pulled a fast one.
In just under a year, the new Military Advanced Training Center for Soldier
Amputees rose from the ground of a campus slated to be moved to
Bethesda, Md., because the Army Medical Command deemed the need to
be immediate.
Before, soldiers practiced walking on their new prosthetic limbs in
hallways and on stairways because the old prosthetic lab wasn’t big
enough to accommodate them and the technicians, let alone the new
devices. And there was no place for family members.
The technology is amazing at the new outpatient center. There’s a climbing
wall that rotates to create new challenges, a firearms simulator with
mechanical hands to properly grip the trigger, a ground simulator that
moves as a service member “walks” through a 3-D forest and a gait lab
that lets scientists gather images from 23 cameras to determine which
movement or device works best for each patient.
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Three Veteran Amputees Climb Mt.
Kilimanjaro
The hikers were Kirk Bauer, 62, who
lost a leg in Vietnam in 1969; Dan
Nevins, 37, who lost his legs in Iraq;
and Neil Duncan, 26, who lost both
legs in a roadside bomb attack in
Afghanistan in 2005,
Nevertheless, the huge achievement
will no doubt inspire others with
similar disabilities. Mr. Bauer,
executive director of Disabled Sports
USA, said:
“If three amputees from three
different wars and two different
generations with literally one good
leg can climb Kilimanjaro, our other
disabled friends can get out and go
hiking or go biking or swim a mile,
can get out and lead a healthy life,”
08 11th, 2010
•Neil Duncan makes his way slowly towards the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro,
•in Tanzania. Duncan lost his legs in Afghanistan.
•Image Credit: AP
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•Andy Hatcher a perdu sa jambe droite en 2004. Rich Ingram a perdu son brat droit.
• Melissa Stockwell porte une prothèse à sa jambe gauche. Tous trois sont des vétérans de la guerre d’Irak
•. Ce dimanche, ils vont faire partie d’un relai pour un triathlon à Alcatraz
2006, Operation Amped
• Founded by a group of surfers in 2006, Operation Amped is about
giving back to those who've been wounded in service of our
country.
As surfers, we can't think of any greater expression of what they
fought for than the freedom of surfing itself. As thanks, we share
our love of the ocean with disabled vets.
Throughout the year, Operation Amped puts on surf events that
range in duration from one day to a week. At these events, vets
who've been wounded have the chance to get free of the
constraints that illness or injury has imposed on them.
Many have never set foot on a surfboard. Many have never set foot
in the ocean. Some can't even swim. But with the support of this
grassroots effort, everyone has fun.
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http://ampsurf.org/
• Tous les vendredis à Tourmaline Beach (San Diego), Dave
essaie d’aider «ces mecs», à refaire surface. Pas comme un
toubib ni un coach. Juste entre surfers.
• En Californie, il n’est plus seul dans sa logique. La veille, se
déroulait le premier événement de 2008 pour Operation
Amped (1), autre initiative de réhabilitation par le surf pour
amputés, sur la plage de Zuma (Malibu), interminable
langue de sable le long de la Highway 1.
• Son principe ? Organiser, plusieurs fois par an et sur trois
jours, des camps de surf encadrés et gratuits.
Contrairement à Donaldson, le créateur d’Operation
Amped, Tom Tapp, petite trentaine et manières délicates,
suit de très loin les affaires militaires
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En Californie, des associations inscrivent le surf
dans le programme de réhabilitation de soldats
blessés en Irak.
•
Who We Are & Our Mission:
We are a Non-Profit Organization made up of
amputees, veterans and friends & family of
the disabled, . We want to Promote, Inspire,
Educate, and Rehabilitate people with
disabilities, especially our veteran heroes
through adaptive surfing & fun safe outdoor
activities all can participate in.
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Depuis 2003
• Whether they are an amputee, blind, suffer from
PTSD, or have quadriplegia. Whether they served
in WWII, Korea, Vietnam, the Gulf war, Iraq or
Afghanistan. Whether they are a child of Autism,
or a young woman who has lost a limb to Cancer,
AmpSurf offers a unique program to bring the
healing power of the ocean and adaptive surfing
together for an experience that is both mentally
and physically one of the best forms of
rehabilitation on the planet.
L’hôpital militaire de San Diego
• Au département des prothèses de l’hôpital militaire de San
Diego, cette problématique technique reste un souci, car
les jambes artificielles adaptées aux sports de glisse n’en
sont qu’à leurs balbutiements. Celles pour le ski ou le
snowboard, à suspension à ressorts, sont plus au point. «A
force d’essais, nous nous sommes aperçus qu’elles
doivent être plus courtes de 5 à 7 cm que la jambe
valide,note Dave Donaldson. Cela oblige à se mettre sur les
bons appuis pour surfer. Mais chaque cas est un nouveau
challenge. Wally, par exemple, a été amputé de sa jambe
avant [en position de surf, ndlr], alors que pour les autres,
c’était la jambe arrière. Il faudra trouver un moyen pour
qu’il puisse la faire passer sous lui afin de se lever
normalement sur sa planche.»
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• Pour le moment, Wally se fait ajuster cette prothèse au
millimètre par son ami Nathaniel Leoncio. Lui-même
amputé en 2005 en Irak, ce médaillé de la Bronze Star fait
bénéficier le département orthopédique de ses
suggestions. Nathaniel, 26 ans, tatouages d’étoiles rouges
et chapeau de paille, «c’était à la fois le mec le plus dur et
le plus rigolo de la classe», résume son ami d’enfance
Shawn. Le genre de personnage qui aide, l’air de rien, des
jeunes comme Wally à remonter la pente. A la différence
du Hawaïen, son amputation a eu lieu il y a suffisamment
longtemps pour qu’il en rigole. «Regarde, ils m’ont donné
un pied blanc», plaisante le jeune homme d’origine
asiatique. «Moi aussi, j’espère qu’il va bronzer», hasarde
un Wally mi-figue mi-raisin.
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Kortney Clemons, a 29-year-old veteran of the
Iraq war, begins our series. Clemons won first
place in the 100-meter sprint in the 2008 U.S.
Paralympics Track & Field National
Championships. He currently trains full time at
the Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista, Calif.,
as part of the Paralympic Track & Field Resident
Team, in hopes of qualifying for the 2012
Paralympic Games in London. His right leg was
amputated above the knee when he was 25.
Amputee Surfing / Amputee Surfingby Katie Callan
- [ Traduire cette page ]Injured in Iraq, US soldiers returning from war as
amputees are surfing as part of their physical therapy. The San Diego Naval
Hospital and events such as ...
www.katiecallan.com/.../amputee-surfing-39.html
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Ben and other amputee soldiers in 2008 chose to surf
at Polzeath, North Cornwall - where Harry learnt the
sport as a teenager. The trio are all attached to Hasler
Company, the Royal Marine rehabilitation unit based
at HMS Drake in Plymouth.
DUNCAN LARCOMBE, Defence Editor , SUN,
Published: 31 May 2010
Pte Derek Derenalagi 'I've got no legs but I can run. I never thought it would be possible'
Amputee and paralysed British soldiers
get back into sport at US Olympic
training camp
When this soldier lost his legs in combat
he thought it was his 'last day on Earth’.
Yet just 15 months later he’s developed a
new passion: sprinting. At an Olympics
training camp in California, David
Harrison watches disabled British
servicemen rediscover their bodies – and
their pride .
TELEGRAPH 7 sept 2010.
Photo: ANTHONY UPTON
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