Trainings and Burns
Published on 26. March 2020
from CADUS-PR

trainings-and-burns-feature-trainings3-9eee4629
The financing of our hospital has been secured for the time being and we are continuing to train medical staff e.g. in terms of dealing with the treatment of burns, which we can treat as the only hospital in the camp.
Even if media attention is currently almost exclusively focused on COVID-19, we should not forget that all other diseases, injuries and other emergencies are not diminishing or less important.
An example from our hospital in al-Howl: the treatment of burn injuries. These are divided into different "degrees". While grade 1 has been experienced by each of us (e.g. on a hot stove, on a hot engine or exhaust pipe..), grade 2 has already caused significant burn blisters. Grade 3 corresponds to open wounds where the skin has been completely burned away by the heat.

These burns have special demands on the treatment. On the one hand, due to the size of the open wound, the risk of wound infection is much higher and on the other hand these wounds only heal with the formation of scar tissue. This means that many burn victims, who are not adequately cared for during the healing process, often have significant restrictions in the parts of the body where the burn wounds were caused throughout their lives.
In addition, there is the fact that considerably more burn injuries occur in refugees who have to live in camps in makeshift accommodation or tents. People have to live there in relatively close quarters, tents and makeshift shelters are much more prone to fire than massive houses. People often cook on open stoves and heat with unsuitable oil or wood heaters.

In Al Hol we are the only field hospital that is currently generally taking care of burns up to the 3rd degree. In addition, we train our nursing staff on a regular basis, so that during the healing phase they can work towards minimizing movement restrictions, so that the patients can return to a "normal" everyday life as soon as possible.
Published
Author: by Jonas Grünwald
Rettungsdienst im Krisengebiet
Dnipro, Millionenstadt über 1800 Kilometer von Berlin, fast 500 Kilometer südöstlich der ukrainischen Hauptstadt Kiew: Vier bis sechs CADUS-Medics sind dort seit August im Wechsel im Einsatz. Mit bis zu vier eigenen Ambulanzfahrzeugen führen sie seither Transporte Schwerverletzter aus der Region im Osten (ca. 100 km …
MICU – Vom Reisebus zum medizinischen Nightliner
Die Feuertaufe ist bestanden: unser Mobile-Intensive-Care-Unit-Bus, kurz „MICU“, hat seine erste Einsatzfahrt gemeistert. Mehrere Monate haben wir, mit der Hilfe vieler Supporter*innen in Berlin und der Ukraine, aus einem Reisebus eine rollende Intensivstation gebaut, um die medizinische Versorgung in der Ukraine zu …
Feldkrankenhaus al-Hol: Perspektiven jenseits von Patient*innenzahlen
Bisher haben wir aus al-Hol meist mit einem Fokus auf unserer medizinischen Arbeit berichtet. Wir haben geschildert wie unsere praktische Arbeit und unsere Kooperation mit den Kolleg*innen vor Ort abläuft. Was wir bislang nicht beleuchtet haben ist eine Auseinandersetzung mit der hoch komplexen, äußerst politischen und …




