Trauma Stabilisation Point Mossul
Veröffentlicht am 30. September 2021
von CADUS-PR

Target country/region: Iraq
Period: June 2017- December 2017
Brief Description:
CADUS provided medical trauma care to civilians in the course of retaking West Mosul. In doing so, this deployment took us one and a half kilometres behind the fighting lines in the summer of 2017. There, we were a part of the first link in the emergency supply chain. As the project progressed, our outreach expanded to Tal Afar, Hawijah, and al-Anbar province.
Project Progress:
As part of the Mobile Hospital project, we were approached by international and Iraqi organizations to provide a civilian trauma stabilization point in Mosul with some of the equipment. At that time, the western part of the city was still heavily contested between Islamic State and Iraqi security forces, and the injured population often received inadequate care despite being severely wounded. Our task was to provide initial care to the injured before they were sent to the far-flung hospitals, to stop life-threatening bleeding and to stabilize them for the necessary transport.
In Mosul alone, we treated several thousand people, including many malnourished children in the final phase of the military campaign. The later missions much further away from the fighting were characterized by urgently needed general medical care for the civilian population. Many had received inadequate or no medical care for years, and some chronic illnesses were correspondingly serious.
Our first mission in a war zone, so close to the conflict, was very challenging but also brought us a big step forward as an organization.
We thank all supporters and donors who made this project possible!
It’s hard to stop the bleeding once it started
Photographer Julius Bauer visited our Medevac team in Dnipro, Ukraine, in February. In this guest article, he gives us a brief insight into the everyday life of our colleagues on site, takes us along on the transport of a wounded patient and shares his thoughts on the recurring war trauma in Ukraine and his impressions of life in the war zone. All photos in this article were taken by him.
It’s hard to stop the bleeding once it started
Der Fotograf Julius Bauer hat im Februar unser Medevac-Team in Dnipro in der Ukraine besucht. In diesem Gastbeitrag gewährt er uns einen kurzen Einblick in den Alltag unserer Kolleg*innen vor Ort, nimmt uns mit auf den Transport eines verwundeten Patienten und teilt seine Gedanken zum wiederkehrendem Kriegstrauma der Ukraine und seine Eindrücke vom Leben im Kriegsgebiet. Alle Fotos in diesem Beitrag stammen von ihm.
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