The Ahl Masr Foundation and Hospital for Burn
Treatment announced on Sunday the arrival of Egypt’s first shipment of
specially preserved frozen human skin, a landmark development set to transform
care for burn victims.
The historic delivery, overseen by the Cabinet,
Ministry of Health and Population, Ministry of Social Solidarity, and the
Egyptian Drug Authority, represents a major milestone in the country’s efforts
to enhance burn treatment capabilities.
The initiative is part of the Ahl Masr Foundation’s
ongoing strategy to strengthen the hospital’s ability to save lives,
particularly amid the global scarcity of such critical biological materials.
Skin allografts, donated by individuals posthumously
and preserved at ultra-low temperatures of -80°C, have revolutionized the
treatment of deep burns since the establishment of the first skin bank in 1949.
Ahl Masr Hospital is now the first facility in Egypt
authorized to import this critical resource and to perform natural human skin
graft operations. The development is particularly significant given that
children constitute 70% of burn victims in the country.
Founder and Chairwoman of the Ahl Masr Foundation and
Hospital, Heba el-Sewedy, said the hospital is proud to lead this
groundbreaking, life-saving procedure in Egypt. She expressed her vision for
Ahl Masr Hospital to become a leading regional center for burn care, offering
advanced treatments and setting new benchmarks in patient care.
Professor Naeem Moemen, head of Surgery at Ahl Masr
Hospital, added that the hospital’s new capability enables safer and faster
burn treatment, better wound protection, and improved patient survival,
underscoring the institution’s commitment to advancing burn care standards
across the region.
Source: The Egyptian Gazette