
www.Usenet.com
| <-- __Chronological__ --> | <-- __Thread__ --> |
It was one of those endearing Bush slips of the tongue. It was supposed to be 'Mission Impossible'. Harry Hope <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>... > From The Boston Globe, 11/30/03: > http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2003/11/30/long_road_ahead_for_many_wounded_troops/ > > Long road ahead for many wounded troops > > American hospital in Germany often just the first stop > > By Aliza Marcus, Globe Correspondent > > LANDSTUHL, Germany -- > > > The dark gray military buses and ambulances arrive every day at the US > medical center here, carrying soldiers wounded in Iraq. > > One with bad shrapnel wounds; another unconscious, with burns over 60 > percent of his body; still others with gunshot wounds, maimed limbs, > open fractures, and spinal injuries. > > Some of the soldiers will be patched up well enough that they can > return within a few weeks to their home bases, if not to their units > in Iraq. > > But many face months of painful treatment at this facility in > southwestern Germany and elsewhere before they can even go home. > > "A lot of them will recover physically, but I have to say it will take > them a long time to recover mentally," said Captain Paulette > Smith-Kimble, an Army Reserve nurse assigned to the intensive care > unit. > > "They are carrying a lot of baggage because of fallen soldiers who > couldn't be saved or the fact that they can't go back [to their unit] > . . . I have seen too many soldiers who lost limbs who can't go back," > added the 34-year-old Boston native. > > Seven months after President Bush declared the end of major combat > operations in Iraq, the casualties keep on coming. > > The wounded often go unmentioned and unreported, their injuries > overshadowed by news of soldiers killed as they went about jobs > ranging from rooting out insurgents to patrolling neighborhoods and > rebuilding schools and power grids. > > As of Friday, the Pentagon reported 434 soldiers had died in Operation > Iraqi Freedom, 298 of those in hostile attacks. > > But for every soldier killed in hostile action, nearly 10 have been > wounded, according to official figures. > > Hundreds of the 2,094 wounded since the start of the conflict end up > at the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, the largest American > hospital outside the United States. > > The transfer of the injured from Iraq is a tightly run operation, with > medical information sent ahead by computer and more highly specialized > medical teams ready to be called in from the United States when > necessary. > > "Even before they take off we can see who is coming, what they need, > and we can make all the plans even before they arrive," said Major > Brent Johnson, a physician assigned to what the hospital calls its > Deployed Warrior Medical Management Center. > > For the wounded, this may be only their first stop on the way to a > rehabilitation center or a hospital in the United States. > > Hospital officials said they try to keep stays down to two weeks. > > If patients cannot go back to duty by then, the goal is to move them > to a treatment center near where they are based or near their > families. > > Specialist Guillermo Espinosa, 20, was brought to Landstuhl this > month. > > He was just back from leave when the bus taking him to his unit in > Kirkuk on Nov. 13 was hit by an explosive device. > > He was lucky; two others on the bus died. > > "This time I was scared," said Espinosa, who received shrapnel wounds > to his legs. > > He would like to return to his unit, but because he cannot put any > weight on his right leg he is "worthless," he said. > > Instead, he will be released soon to his home Army base in Vincenza, > Italy. > > In the buildup to the war, the number of hospital beds at the > Landstuhl center was doubled to about 300, while 600 reservists were > called in to help staff the hospital. > > During the past few months, the number of beds has returned to normal, > while nearly half the reservists have been released. > > With the US military now more entrenched in Iraq, injured soldiers > often can be treated there, reducing the number who need to be flown > out for treatment. > > What has not changed, hospital staff members said, is the level of > acute cases. > > The reliance of the insurgents in Iraq on improvised explosive devices > -- including roadside bombs or mortars set off by remote control -- > has meant a lot of messy, contaminated wounds and heavily injured > limbs. > > "We are seeing soldiers coming with missing eyes and limbs," said > Major Cathy M. Martin, chief nurse of the intensive care unit. > > "You kind of develop a thick skin, but it still gets to you. It's > never easy." > > ______________________________________________________ > > And the question remains why has George W. Bush sent our husbands, > wives, brothers, sisters, friends, relatives, kids off to be killed > and maimed. > > Harry > > While Americans were dying in Vietnam and demonstrating in America, > our hawkish President did neither. > http://www.interventionmag.com/cms/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=216 > > Harry
| <-- __Chronological__ --> | <-- __Thread__ --> |