With eyes full of hope, injured elephants walk again—each step a miracle made possible by the kindness of the ‘Jungle Doctor.’

Australian veterinarian Dr. Chloe Buiting is beloved on social media for her work with elephant amputees caused by land mines. @jungle_doctor/Instagram

Dr. Chloe Buiting

Here’s an elephant with a little more pep in his step.

Australian veterinarian Dr. Chloe Buiting, aka the Jungle Doctor, is cherished among animal lovers on social media for her work with elephant amputees, which has revealed to many viewers that, yes, animals big and small need accessibility, too.

Elephant who had an accident receives prosthetic leg :  r/Damnthatsinteresting

Footage captured at the Friends of the Asian Elephant Hospital in northern Thailand, the world’s first elephant clinic and manufacturer of pachyderm prosthetics, shows 7-month-old elephant Mosha being fitted for her prosthetic leg, which she lost due to a land mine at the embattled border between Myanmar and Thailand.

“I’ve shared a bit with you about the use of prosthetic limbs in elephants, but have you seen how they are put on?!⁣” she asked her 166,000 followers in the caption of a recent post featuring Mosha. The rudimentary appendage uses a belt and ratchet system at the socket, leading to a rubber pad at the foot.

Meet Mosha, the Elephant With a Prosthetic Leg - ABC News

A follow-up clip features Mosha taking her prosthetic limb for a stroll, and also showcases the hospital’s elephant limb factory. “Asian elephants can live well beyond 40 years in the wild, and Mosha was just at the start of her young life,” she said.

Buiting also points out that the largely Buddhist community who operates the clinic is determined to preserve life.

“While euthanasia for such an injury may be considered as an option in many places around the world, in Thailand, where a large percentage of the population follows Buddhism, it is not so readily discussed or practiced,” Buiting wrote.

Dr. Claire Buiting shown holding a prosthetic limb in the making

“The hospital does groundbreaking work that helps elephants who have lost their legs from landmines,” Buiting told Australia’s 7NEWS in a recent interview.

“It gives the elephants quality of life that they otherwise wouldn’t be able to have,” she added.

The Friends of the Elephant Hospital and Buiting also announced last September that they were seeking a biomedical engineer to join a project to help develop more advanced prosthetic limbs for elephants.

“No prior experience with animals is necessary (although an interest in the cross-over of human and animal health is good!),” she wrote.