Press News
The Donation Line rings for the Child Rescue Service
Budapest, July 13, 2004
In July and August, people calling the 1788 Matáv Donation Line on a fixed line will donate 100 HUF with each call for the International Children Safety Service. The civil association intends to use the money collected from the donations for the maintenance and expansion of their therapeutic consulting room in Teréz körút.
The International Children Safety Service was set up in
1990 as a result of international cooperation, in an effort to rescue the
orphans kept under inhuman circumstances in the orphanage of Csegőd, near
Nagyvárad. The Service operates on a voluntary basis, without regard to
religious, political affiliation or nationality. The work of the
non-governmental organization is aimed at supporting physically and mentally
handicapped children, orphans and others in need of help, improving their living
conditions and laying the foundations of their future subsistence. Its
charitable activities focus on 12 programs including a health program, a child
catering program, a foster parenting program, a legislation support program, a
holidaying program, a training and advanced training program, aid consignments,
help to and/or cooperation with other organizations, events, an information and
guidance program, film, television and photo documentation as well as a
Contemporary Art Collection. More detailed information about these programs is
available at the homepage www.gyermekmento.hu.
In July and August, people
calling the Matáv Donation Line on a fixed telephone will give donations for the
maintenance and expansion of the Child Rescue Service's therapeutic consulting
room in Teréz körút. Mainly children of kindergarten/junior primary school age
with behavioral problems or learning disorders have been treated at this
location for three years now. In the everyday life, these children show
hyperactivity, constantly come into conflict with the rules, have low
performance capacity in comparison to their IQ, and suffer from partial
capability problems such as minor motion disorders or disorders of writing,
reading and counting at school. The so-called Ayres therapy is used to help
these children in a special gym equipped with swing-like tools. Under the
guidance of a therapist trained in this method, significant improvement can be
reached in the movement of small children and through that, also in their
performance and learning abilities.
In addition to motion therapy,
developmental and special pedagogical training is also provided in this
facility. From September the scope of their professional services will be
expanded through the employment of a professional staff trained in child
psychotherapy, speech therapy and therapeutic gymnastics. In this way, parents
need not take their children to several places but can have a single team
working with the family in one place. Until now, the Service could look after
30-40 children in a school year; after the expansion in September this number
will increase and/or the staff will be able to spend more time with each child,
offering them several therapies.