Watch HBO Tuesday - Baghdad Hospital: Inside the Red Zone
Monday, January 28, 2008
JC Jones MA RN
Fulbright scholar Dr. Omer Salih Mahdi filmed inside the ER where he works at Al-Yarmouk hospital in Baghdad, revealing the terrible wounds suffered by Iraqi civilians in the ongoing fighting. As an ER nurse, I got emotional watching as the staff, working without anesthesia in substandard conditions, had to insert an adult size chest tube into the tiny body of a 6 year old boy with shrapnel wounds. Caught in the crossfire between, staff are targets because they treat anyone - Shiites, Sunni, militia, police.
A few of us here at Healthline were involved behind the scenes with 4 year old boy who was injured in the crossfire in Baghdad. He was on his way to buy candy with his uncle when bullets started flying. The two ducked behind a car but the car burst into flames when hit by a bullet. The boy and his uncle survived but were badly burned. The boy's leg is not developing properly due to scar tissue and he was scheduled to have surgery at Shriner's Hospital in Boston next month. The hospital was going to pay for the series of operations and all of the travel expenses. The mother of one of our employees was working with Iraqi refugees in Jordan. She and others involved in the boy's case tried and tried to get the right visa to satisfy US Homeland Security to allow his travel for the surgery. The boy and his father were unable to get the proper G series passport that would allow them to qualify for the humanitarian visa proving they would return to Jordan after the surgery. Disheartened, we received an email from Jordan saying the boy's father stating he was giving up. The surgery was canceled.
The film, which received a 2007 International Emmy Award for Current Affairs, debuts January 29 at 8:30 PM on HBO
Other HBO playdates:
-- Feb. 6 (9:15 a.m., 8 p.m.)
-- Feb. 9 (3:30 p.m.)
-- Feb. 12 (4:30 p.m., 11:45 p.m.)
-- Feb. 17 (12:30 p.m.)
-- Feb. 22 (3:15 p.m.)
-- HBO2 playdate: Jan. 30 (9:45 p.m.)
Today, Dr. Madi is a journalism student at the Institute for International Education at
Ball State University in Indiana.
Thank you http://www.thewe.cc/.../r3216879803.jpe for use of image of Injured Iraqi children.Labels: Baghdad, hospital ER, injuries, Iraqi civilians
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US Military Casualities: Amputations at Record Numbers
Thursday, August 30, 2007
JC Jones MA RN

Last summer a
report from the Congressional Research Service based on Department of Defense information was sent to Congress detailing the US military casualty statistics in Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom. Twenty percent of soldiers injured have multiple injuries - and may have
traumatic brain injury (TBI) as well as
traumatic amputations. All most half of the amputations are caused by IED's. These could be prevented if the transportation vehicles our troops are using had undersides designed to bear the impact of this well known threat. The
MRAP is one such vehicle that the Marine Corp is now contracted to produce. It has a V-shaped underbelly desgned to protect against underground devices.
Advances in battlefield medicine have saved many combatants who might have died - but is the rehabilitation they receive up to par? The
Center for the Intrepid, a $50M rehabilitation center in opened its doors in San Antonio, Texas in January, 2007 to treat the record number of amputees and troops with severe burns. Amputee rehabilitation programs are run at Brooke Medical Center in Texas, Walter Reed Medical Center and Bethesda Naval Medical Center. Housing has been built at
Center of the Intrepid for families of the soldiers in rehab. The Center was funded by private donations from 600,000 US citizens, which means the world to the beneficiaries of the services provided. State-of-the-art technology is provided to military amputees including advanced
prosthetics, computerized and video monitoring, biomechanical studies and advanced
physical therapy methods.
One of these programs is the
art program at the Center, a collaboration between the
General Services Administration (GSA) and the
Fallen Heroes Fund. The art work was chosen to complement the architecture, to remind visitors of the heroes and the sacrifices they have made for the US, and to support the physical rehabilitation programs and motivate participation in extreme sports. The Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund and the
Wounded Warrior Project has also just made available a publication
" A Handbook for Injured Service Members and Their Families". The handbook provides information about what to expect, resources available and issues that will crop up. The handbook is available at
www.fallenheroesfund.org. New generation prosthetic devices are being designed by researchers at Arizona State University's Polytechnic campus and the Military Amputee Research Program at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. The
Otto Bock C-Leg has a microprocessor knee and was introduced in 1997. It allows the wearer to go up or down hills and slopes and
provides greater freedom of movement. Otto Bock also makes a
myoelectric hand that is lightweight, compact and responsive.
If you want to get up close and personal with some of the amputees returning from Iraq, watch HBO's
Alive Day Memories: Home From Irag from Executive Producer James Gandolfini. The documentary film premieres on September 9, 2007 at 10:30 PM and continues through September 16, 2007. Don't miss it - I have had a chance to see it and it is very moving. These American heroes have sacrificed their health and well being - they don't want us to forget them.
Labels: amputees, HBO, injuries, Iraq, prostheses, veterans, warrior
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