From the BBC:
“David Nott: The UK war
surgeon teaching front line Ukrainian doctors”
(David Nott (in the blue shirt)
demonstrates surgical techniques on Heston, the medical dummy.)
Renowned war surgeon David Nott
has been in Ukraine, treating victims of the Russian invasion and training
Ukrainian surgeons in the finer details of conflict-related surgery. At a
hospital in the east of the country, well within range of Russian rockets, the
British surgeon calmly carries out a complicated skin graft, helping to save
the leg of a woman who suffered catastrophic injuries in a Russian shelling
attack. Midway through the procedure, Prof Nott turns to his assistant - a
Ukrainian surgeon called Ivan and says: "Here, you do it."
For David Nott, one of the
world's most experienced trauma surgeons, this is the culmination of a
week-long trip to Ukraine, during which he and his team will have trained
dozens of local doctors. He has operated under fire in front-line situations
around the world - from Syria to Yemen, Gaza to South Sudan and now in Ukraine.
This is Prof Nott's second trip to the country since the Russian invasion at
the end of February. This time he is not just operating on victims of war but
aiming to pass on some of his immense depth of knowledge and surgical
experience. "I know what it's like to be under fire. I know what it's like
to be in an operating theatre which is being shelled," he says. "You're
trying to do your best to try and save the life of the patient in front of you.
But what we can do here is train people and I think we will have trained 70
surgeons in six days."
(Orthopaedic surgeon Oleksi
Horehliad says it is easy for doctors to get stressed)
Some of those attending the
intensive three-day course run by the David Nott Foundation are front-line doctors,
momentarily returning from the fighting in the eastern Donbas region. One
doctor admitted to the BBC that, too often, they do not have enough medical
expertise or experience to keep people alive when they arrive at field
hospitals with catastrophic injuries. Others here are civilian medics, learning
new skills, because their hospitals are full of people with new kinds of
injuries. For orthopaedic surgeon Oleksi Horehliad, the three months since the
Russian invasion have almost been a case of sink-or-swim. "It's very
stressful, not only for patients but for doctors too," he says. "It's
a horrible situation when you see these young guys with mangled extremities,
with shrapnel wounds, with amputations. It's just a disaster for me."
The big draw at these courses
might be Prof Nott and his years of experience, but the star of the show is
Heston - a life-like medical dummy with 50 separate surgical procedures,
replicating war wounds. Costing tens of thousands of pounds, Heston is part of
a system that allows Prof Nott and his team to teach advanced life-saving
skills. He instructs the Ukrainian doctors in complex surgical techniques -
such as how to deal with blood loss, how to quickly assess and stabilise a
patient in the first few minutes, plastic surgery, and amputations.
Travelling across Ukraine has
been tiring work for this group of veteran war surgeons. Their last destination
is the front-line city of Kharkiv - battered by Russian shelling, with
thousands of injured people being treated by over-stretched local doctors. "It's
really difficult and frustrating to not be able to help a patient because of
limited resources, especially on the front line," says Ammar Darwish, a
Manchester-based surgeon who has accompanied Prof Nott on surgical expeditions
around the globe. "In places like Ukraine or Syria or Yemen, you just need
to concentrate on your patient and treat them, especially when you have mass
casualties - it's very difficult." As with the student doctor who helped
out on the operation to save a patient's leg, the most rewarding thing for Prof
Nott is that medics here are already putting complex techniques learned on his
course into practise. "It's been amazing," he says. "I've just
had a message on my phone from a doctor who's done his first ever thoracotomy
to save a patient's life by making an incision into the heart. That's thanks to
the training he had two days ago. He's now back on the front line in Donbas
under severe conditions. And he sent me a photograph to say, 'look what I've
done, David, I've made the incision, I've done exactly what you've been
teaching us.'" The day after his return to the UK, Prof Nott is due back
on shift in an operating theatre in his day job as a National Health Service
(NHS) consultant - but he's already organising the next life-saving mission for
the foundation that bears his name.
^ The more the world helps
Ukraine, like this War Surgeon is doing, the sooner Russia will be defeated and
peace will return. ^
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