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A Syrian nurse talks to a patient who has received surgical care in a MSF field hospital in northern Syria.
Read Me
Column ‘Working from a cave in Syria we did over 100 operations’
Paul McMaster, a surgeon experienced in working in war zones, says Syria was a “more oppressive type of danger”.
1.10pm, 25 Nov 2012
78
11
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) surgeon Paul McMaster is just back from Syria where he treated the wounded in an operating theatre set up in a cave and then a farm. He writes:
I FLEW INTO Turkey, and then we went up to the low mountains near the border, where we were picked up by a guide who took us through the forests and hills and into Syria. Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has four surgical teams working in the conflict zone in the northwest of Syria. Our team was working in a cave. We went in through a very small entrance. Inside, there was an inflatable operating tent and six emergency beds.
Everything took place in that area, and it was often hectic and difficult for people to move around. Still, it was remarkable to have created a sterile environment, with all the right surgical equipment, in what was essentially a dusty chalk cave. We were staying 15 minutes away in a very small village. Most of us were sleeping on the floor in the basement room of the mosque. The villagers were happy for us to be there. Every day a lady in the village cooked a whole lot of flat bread, so we lived on that, and beans.
Quite a lot of the population had left the area for refugee camps on the other side of the border with Turkey. But there are still significant numbers of older people, women and children remaining, and these are the areas that are being rocketed and bombed from helicopters.
Helicopter gunships
The helicopters travel around slowly and hover over towns before dropping large bombs, and these things cascade down and cause an enormous blast and destroy buildings. The bombing of the towns and villages was happening every day. When they explode in the mountains, the bombs create enormous explosions of sound which reverberate through the hills and are clearly very frightening for people. On our last morning in the cave, several landed within a couple of hundred metres of us, shaking the cave and bringing down dust. You didn’t quite know whether you were better off outside or inside. It’s very unsettling for everybody, especially for wounded patients and children.
In our team there was a surgeon, an anaesthetist, an emergency nurse, two doctors, a Syrian nurse in her early 30s, who was just inspirational – never tired, always organised, always smiling – and about 11 young women from the villages who we were slowly training to do basic nursing.
Civilian patients
The majority of our patients were civilians – old people, women, children, babies. Many had been wounded in bombings and had shrapnel injuries. Sometimes the injuries weren’t physically serious, but emotionally and psychologically they were very damaging indeed.
One night we were called in and there were two distraught women with three screaming babies. Their house had been literally demolished by a bomb, and these children had shrapnel wounds to their faces – the wounds were not life threatening, but they were in great distress and anguish. Another night a man in his late 30s was brought in by a very excitable crowd of fighters. He’d been shot through his chest, we had very limited blood supplies and his condition was so unstable that I doubted he’d make it through the night. But he pulled through, and the determination he showed was quite remarkable.
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I remember another man who came in with severe shrapnel wounds to his leg. The blast had gone through his leg and damaged the main nerve, but not the main blood vessel. He had lost two or three of his family in the blast. We operated on him, but afterwards he lost all motivation to get better – he’d lost his home, he’d lost many of his family, and he faced a potentially crippling injury. It’s really very difficult for people. Over the last five or six weeks, we did about 100 operations and treated many more casualties. We also saw diabetics who had run out of medication, children with asthma, women who needed caesarean sections.
No access to healthcare
These people have had no access to effective healthcare for over a year. Some people might be able to make it over the mountains to Turkey to get treatment, but for many that’s just not an option. When you’re faced with casualties, the surgery is fairly straightforward. You do what’s called damage limitation surgery to stop haemorrhages and deal with damaged internal organs. The difficulty came when we moved to the reconstructive phase – things like physiotherapy and rehabilitation and more complex orthopaedics – this was work we just couldn’t do in the cave.
You can get overwhelmed. When it became fairly clear that medically we were struggling to cope with the patients in the cave, we closed it and transferred our patients and the team to a new location. It was a farm – so not a great upgrade.
The new hospital was a long, open building, and in the space of just four or five days, the logisticians managed to create an inflatable operating theatre, an emergency triage area, a sterilisation unit, an outpatient consulting area, and an inpatient and recovery area – it was a staggering achievement. It wasn’t perfect, it still looked a bit like a farm, but it created much more space to treat casualties. We moved half the patients on Thursday and the rest on Friday, and by Saturday we were operating in the new location.
Danger from above
I’ve worked in many difficult places with MSF – war zones like Sri Lanka, Ivory Coast and Somalia – but while in those countries it was dangerous on the ground, in Syria the danger always comes from the air. It’s a much more oppressive type of danger, having a helicopter hovering in the sky above you. Many of the towns are like ghost towns, with the buildings blasted or destroyed. There’s a hopeless, desperate air about the place. Most people are living in cellars. They’ve had no electricity for eight or nine months.
It’s very bleak indeed and winter is beginning now. I think people are really going to struggle, and the most vulnerable will struggle most. For the civilian population, trying to light little fires in their basements, it’s going to be a very long, hard, cold, dangerous winter.
The MSF Ireland office was set up in 2006, after several MSF offices abroad noticed a rising number of applications from skilled, prospective Irish volunteers, from both medical and non-medical backgrounds. Find out more here.
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400 million and 15 years for report – we are all being taken for a ride it’s disgusting and shows the true robbers are the judiciary and the likes ! WE WON’T STAND FOR THIS !
what annoys me is that they are concentrating on Bertie yet a whole clatter of councillors from all parties are named and are guilty of taking bribes yet they are not highlighted…. I say name and shame the lot and not just Bertie….
Hi Martin,
A large portion of the report is indeed taken up with Bertie Ahern’s finances but you are quite right – there are others who are found to have taken corrupt payments (the report stopped short of saying Ahern was corrupt).
We have also done individual pieces on them, in case you would like to read more, on Frank Dunlop, Liam Lawlor and Padraig Flynn, for example.
We have named the five councillors that can be named out of the 11 found to have taken corrupt payments (the others are still involved in court cases and can’t be legally named until those are over): http://www.thejournal.ie/corrupt-payments-to-councillors-were-abuse-of-democratic-system-mahon-392379-Mar2012/
If you want to see the full list of analysis from today, you can click here: http://www.thejournal.ie/topic/mahon/
Thanks a mill,
Susan, Editor, TheJournal.ie
He couldn’t have done it without the help of the scumbags in his party and who’ll forget McDowell nodding away as Bertie explained away payments with fanciful terms.
Ahern may have been the salesman, but there were plenty of his friends and party colleagues that bottled and made the snake oil.
On another topic is anyone going to ask M. Martin if he is going to return the payments he received from Eoin o’Callaghan. In case he does not remember, they are ones that ended up in his wife’s bank account. Do the decent thing for once Martin!
Actually Nero did allot better than Bertie, he organised relief work and tried hard to put out the fires, for the victims of the fire he provided food and relief funds, as for fiddling I do believe he played the lyre :D….. Bertie’s just a wanker though !!
Normally pics of him make my skin crawl. This one not so much, think its because that mic lead is positioned so nicely, reminds me of a hang mans noose !
He will worm his way out of this – as he has always done. The lot of them should be locked up and some serious reforms need to be implemented, otherwise this report has been another waste of taxpayers money
The Good Friday Agreement and all he did for the north peace process is gone out the Door. Bertie Ahearn will be remembered solely for this. The Office of Taoiceach has been Tarnished.I see that Developer Owen O Callaghan is going for a judicial review on the issue where the Tribunal concerns him.Busy days ahead for the Media.
The nations reaction to this reminds me of a scene from the film, “History of the World”.
“Taoiseach, the peasants are revolting.”
“Eh, you’re right dere Micheal, they stink”.
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