Israel/Palestine
Related: About this forumSyrian doctor, in unprecedented note, asks Israel to save patient’s life
A handwritten doctors note was found attached to the clothing of a Syrian man brought to Israel in critical condition Tuesday. The note explained, in Arabic, previous surgical procedures and medical care the man had received days before in Syria. It asked Israel to save his life because the Syrian doctors could not provide the necessary medical treatment.
While Israel has started to treat growing numbers of people wounded in Syrian battles close to the border in recent months, this was the first case of a cross-border transfer from a Syrian medical facility. The note, which was signed by a Syrian doctor and dated June 8, opened with Hello distinguished surgeon and explained that the patient, aged 28, suffered from a gunshot wound in the chest and shrapnel damage to his diaphragm and liver, according to a translation provided by Channel 10.
The Syrian doctor performed surgery to address heavy abdominal bleeding but noted that the liver could not be sewed up and that it was necessary to examine the condition of the abdominal injury and remove the heavy pressure bandages that the doctor had applied.
Please do what is necessary and thanks in advance, the note concluded, while noting the various drugs that had been used during treatment and that the patient had been hospitalized for two days. Israel has so far treated around 20 Syrians who have been injured as a result of the Syrian civil war, and the IDF has set up a field hospital along the Israeli-Syrian border to help care for the injured. This particular patient, transferred by the IDF to Ziv Medical Center in Safed on Tuesday, is believed to be the first to be treated in Israel who had recent medical care in Syria.
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http://www.timesofisrael.com/doctors-note-attached-to-wounded-syrian-treated-in-safed/
bunnies
(15,859 posts)Despite the actions of TPTB. We need more of this. Good on the Doctors in Israel for treating people from Syria even after finding a live grenade on a patient.