TECHNOLOGY: REAL LIFE IN 3-D
If you were to spot Tanzeela in her classroom or on a bus, you wouldn’t notice anything out of the ordinary. Beneath her dupatta, however, the 22 year old hides something she’s struggled with all her life: a partially-missing arm which she was born with. “I never show it [the arm] to anyone. At home I don’t care but I always keep it hidden in public,” she says. While she feels she manages fine with one arm, she points out that she often feels “something is missing”.
Soon, however, her life might completely change. She’s waiting her turn to receive a robotic arm from Bioniks, a Karachi-based spin-off of a company which specialises in 3-D technology. Their claim to fame: the first private, non-profit company in Pakistan to design and produce robotic arms. When I meet Ovais Hussain Qureshi, Head of Bioniks, at his office, he shows me a video that Tanzeela’s mother has shot and sent to Qureshi. The 22 year old is bent down and ironing clothes with one arm. “We do this so we can see people’s movements and have a better idea of what we should design for them,” he says.
Tanzeela is one of many clients Qureshi and his team are working with. “One of our goals is to make prosthetics more acceptable in Pakistan,” says Qureshi. “We’re currently working on a system where we can measure patients online or remotely via Skype or webcam and then mail them the prosthetic limb. We have many inquiries from people abroad, from places such as the United States, Bahrain and Indonesia, so it makes sense to explore this option.”
3-D printing has been around for decades. But now a Pakistani non-profit is using it to provide prosthetics to people with disabilities and causing revolutions in their lives
It’s not surprising that Bioniks is fielding so much interest both at home and abroad. With so many people with disabilities worldwide, there is a great need for robotic arms and prosthetic limbs. According to the World Health Organisation, which defines disability as an “umbrella term for impairments, activity limitations and participation restrictions,” 15 percent of the world has some form of disability including 110 million to 190 million people who have “significant difficulties in functioning” in their daily lives.
Experts can’t agree on the number of people with disabilities in Pakistan but according to a 2014 report, Moving from the Margins: Mainstreaming Persons with Disabilities in Pakistan, prepared by the Economist Intelligence Unit for the British Council, 27 million people in Pakistan have a physical or intellectual disability. The report points out that a lack of effort by the government to accommodate and include people with disabilities in the economy could be costing the country between 4.9 percent and 6.3 percent of its GDP each year. For those who suffer from a disability, however, the greater cost is the emotional toll and the social trauma it brings.