Preventable Amputation
The Preventable Amputation initiative is dedicated to ending avoidable limb loss through coordinated care, early intervention, and community awareness.
By combining teamwork, technology, and unwavering determination, this project focuses on reducing amputations caused by chronic wounds, unmanaged diseases, delayed diagnosis, and lack of preventive resources.
Why choose this Project
Many amputations are avoidable with proper screening, education, and timely medical care. This project promotes evidence-based interventions and collaborative strategies that protect limb health, preserve mobility, and improve quality of life.
Early Detection & Screening
Encouraging regular foot and wound checks to catch high-risk issues before they escalate.
Community Education
Raising public awareness on preventable causes and signs of limb-threatening conditions.
Team-Based Care
Supporting coordinated efforts among healthcare providers, caregivers, and specialists.
Technology & Innovation
Using modern tools and platforms for monitoring, intervention planning, and follow-up care.
Goal – To create a world where avoidable amputations are eliminated through prevention, empowerment, and equitable access to care
Benefits by choosing us
This initiative strengthens health outcomes by prioritizing early action, reducing limb loss, and promoting sustained independence for individuals facing limb-threatening conditions.
Prevented Limb Loss
Reducing the incidence of avoidable amputations through proactive care.
- Enhanced quality of life and mobility
Empowered Communities
Educated individuals and families are better equipped to manage risk factors.
- Improved public health awareness
Frequently Asked Questions
Answers about the Preventable Amputation initiative.
This project seeks to eliminate avoidable amputations by promoting prevention and early medical care.
Individuals at risk of limb loss due to diabetes, wounds, vascular disease, trauma, or delayed diagnosis.
Through early detection, education, technology tools, and coordinated clinical care.
No — it combines community outreach, education, and clinical strategies.
To create an amputation-free world by addressing root causes and expanding preventive care access.
