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Gaza surgeons meet to discuss weapon wounds
12 Mar 2008 10:11:55 GMT
Source: International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) - Switzerland
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Tel Aviv / Jerusalem (ICRC) – "All war wounds are contaminated," says Marco Baldan, chief surgeon of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

"They therefore easily become infected if not rapidly treated.

And because bullets and bomb fragments strike at such high velocity, they generally cause more damage than other types of injury.

The resulting wounds have to be managed in a way not usually taught at medical school".

Dr Baldan and fellow ICRC surgeon Harald Veen are in the Gaza Strip to hold a seminar on war surgery from 11 to 13 March.

The two have a total of over 25 years working in conflict zones.

Dr Baldan has just returned from Kenya, while Dr Veen has recently operated in Iraq and Chad.

The Gaza seminar brings together over 65 Palestinian surgeons and other staff from hospitals throughout the Gaza Strip.

They will discuss the latest techniques for managing weapons injuries, with sessions on ballistics, orthopaedics and prosthetics, vascular and abdominal injuries.

During the recent escalation in fighting in Gaza at the end of February, many hospitals were overwhelmed with casualties.

Dealing with mass casualties in difficult circumstances is precisely one of topics featured at the seminar.

"A massive influx of casualties poses enormous challenges," says Dr Veen, who himself worked in Gaza in an ICRC surgical team in June 2007.

"Saving lives depends on hospitals being adequately equipped and having skilled staff who will take the right decisions quickly.” Doctors and nurses in Gaza already have a great deal of knowledge, he said, because they deal with complex injuries all the time.

The seminar would therefore also be an opportunity to share experiences.

During the past 25 years, ICRC surgeons have treated over 100,000 weapon-wounded patients around the world.

More than 35,000 cases have been entered into a database that uses a wound-scoring system.

The resulting data have helped the ICRC draw up basic principles for the management of war injuries.

The ICRC organizes seminars for war surgeons from countries such as Iraq, Sri Lanka and Lebanon, and currently has teams of it own working in Chad, Kenya, Sudan, Congo-Kinshasa and Afghanistan.

This is the third war-surgery seminar in Gaza, following previous events in 2002 and 2004.

In addition, the ICRC supports hospitals and emergency medical services with surgical supplies according to need, and coordinates transfer of patient to hospitals outside Gaza.

Since November 2007, the ICRC has also been providing limb-fitting and rehabilitation services inside the Gaza Strip.


For further information, please contact:
Leila Blacking, ICRC Jerusalem, tel: +972 2 582 88 45 or +972 52 601 91 50
Iyad Nasr, ICRC Gaza, tel: +972 8 28 28 874 or +972 59 60 30 15
Yael Segev-Eytan, ICRC Tel Aviv, tel: +972 3 524 52 86 or +972 52 275 75 17

Dorothea Krimitsas, ICRC Geneva, tel: +41 22 730 25 90 or +41 79 251 93 18



See also ICRC media contacts

This article on www.icrc.org


[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]


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[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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