- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 210
CTV coverage of civilian physicians in the R3 at KAF:
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20070813/mobile_hospital_070813/20070813/
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- They are the battered and broken. Afghanistan's war wounded arrive at the Canadian Forces trauma hospital on the Kandahar base on a daily basis.
Capt. Helen Wright, a family doctor for the military when at home in Calgary, says this is a different kind of practice.
"I have seen far more acute traumas in the six months," she says, "than certainly I have seen in my entire training and likely more than I will ever see in my time back in North America."
In the past six months, about 400 patients have passed through the front doors of the hospital and into the capable hands of multi-national medical teams. The teams include both military and civilian doctors.
The hospital's commanding officer, Col. Colin MacKay explains that civilian doctors are needed. "We have civilian surgeons here right now, because with the Canadian military right now, we have a shortage of uniformed surgeons at the present time."
More on link
Nice to see some familiar faces hard at work...for a change >
CTV newsnet also has a piece running on this, but I only caught the last couple minutes of it early this morning.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20070813/mobile_hospital_070813/20070813/
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- They are the battered and broken. Afghanistan's war wounded arrive at the Canadian Forces trauma hospital on the Kandahar base on a daily basis.
Capt. Helen Wright, a family doctor for the military when at home in Calgary, says this is a different kind of practice.
"I have seen far more acute traumas in the six months," she says, "than certainly I have seen in my entire training and likely more than I will ever see in my time back in North America."
In the past six months, about 400 patients have passed through the front doors of the hospital and into the capable hands of multi-national medical teams. The teams include both military and civilian doctors.
The hospital's commanding officer, Col. Colin MacKay explains that civilian doctors are needed. "We have civilian surgeons here right now, because with the Canadian military right now, we have a shortage of uniformed surgeons at the present time."
More on link
Nice to see some familiar faces hard at work...for a change >
CTV newsnet also has a piece running on this, but I only caught the last couple minutes of it early this morning.