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Hospital in Afghan opium hub comes as blessing
Web posted at: 12/24/2007 2:42:26
Source ::: AFP

CAMP BASTION, Afghanistan • A petite village woman with dark henna on her hands lies wrapped in a blue sheet at the best hospital around-a British military facility in southern Afghanistan.

Raheena, who puts her age at about 30, was brought here by helicopter in late October with gunshot wounds to her abdomen and chest.

She is one of the lucky Afghan civilians to benefit from world-class health care, at a place where it is not always clear which side the patients are on in the battle for the soul of the war-torn country.

In Raheena's case, she said through an interpreter, her sons found some bullets in the desert and somehow some of them exploded.

"Our children are uneducated," she said. "They were playing." Helmand province is Afghanistan's opium heartland, an area from which drugs barons extract huge profits-some of which fund the Taliban-while villagers live in poverty with little access to decent health care.

But at the British Army Field Hospital at Camp Bastion, a town-like base built out of the vast Afghan desert, Raheena has had the best medical treatment in Afghanistan, perhaps even better than some people could get in Britain.

In the hive of tents that make up the hospital, there are top-class surgeons and consultants instantly available for any speciality-besides a normal rotation of anaesthetists and nurses.

There is a pharmacy and a pathology lab with virtually instant results for which one might wait an hour in Britain, said Colonel Ian Goulbourne, a leading consultant surgeon in Britain who commands the hospital. There are digital X-rays that take five seconds, a CT scanner and special blood warmers. A brand-new operating table came in early November.

"We can do most operations here, life- and limb-saving," the colonel said. The staple is, of course, "typical war surgery" from gun shots, mines and improvised bombs-one of the biggest threats to the 60,000 international troops in Afghanistan.

Then there was a case when surgeons had to remove a piece of the cranium of one Afghan child embedded in another after a suicide bombing. "We see more trauma here in a week than most hospitals in the UK would see in a year," Goulbourne said.

The priority of this medical team of about 100 people is the soldiers-Afghan and international.

The staff also treat the many civilians caught up in Taliban suicide bombings or military air strikes.

 
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