Ukraine Update: One ambulance becomes 20
Published on 2. June 2022
from CADUS-PR

ukraine-update-one-ambulance-becomes-20-feature-2-4b8caf51
For one month now, we have been on site in Ukraine with a four-wheel drive ambulance and are transporting patients. At the request of the World Health Organization (WHO), CADUS is now coordinating all international medical evacuations from Ukraine.
Coordination center for international medical evacuations
The CADUS team in Lviv, our base in Western Ukraine, is not only transporting patients through Ukraine. At the same time, CADUS is working on the establishment of the coordination center, which will coordinate a total of 20 ambulances of international aid organizations. This will allow Ukrainian patients to be distributed from war-torn areas to hospitals within Europe, where they will undergo urgent specialized treatment.
Our coordination center will work with both internationally experienced organizations and the many smaller Ukrainian initiatives that have already been working to evacuate people from contested areas since the outbreak of the war and are doing great work here. “We are working hard to connect all actors* as best as we can to provide effective, rapid assistance to the affected people,” said Sebastian, Team Lead of Ukraine Mission.

The four-wheel ambulance in action in Ukraine. Photo: CADUS
Patient transports in Ukraine
With our four-wheel ambulance we were able to provide real additional value and help patients in need last month. After a transport from Chernihiv, on the Belarusian-Ukrainian border, to Lviv, our medics reported: “Such injured people need our four-wheel intensive care ambulance. You can’t transport them with a normal ambulance.”
It was supposed to be a twelve-hour drive for the team – in the end, the trip took around 22 hours. The further east they got, the more they had to contend with destroyed roads and demolished bridges. The patient, who had to be evacuated from Chernihiv for special treatment, was finally delivered safely and successfully to the good care structure in Lviv.

A patient transport through Kyjiv. Photo: CADUS
Especially the hospitals in Ukraine have impressed our medics so far: “What the hospital staff in Chernihiv has done is really unbelievable” says Simon, an emergency paramedic. “The clinic only worked with emergency power, and there were cable drums everywhere. There were only three doctors left in the whole hospital, but all the patients were in a condition that was unbelievably good for these catastrophic conditions.”
Due to the high demand, we have already brought another ambulance to Ukraine and work a lot with various organizations. Always with the aim of giving critically ill patients the best possible chance of survival.
Published
Author: by Cadus PR
Three weeks as a medic in Mosul, three weeks in a warzone.
"[...], despite the many dead and the impression that my own work would be nothing but a drop in the ocean. Even though you can always discuss the political impact of humanitarian missions, their meaningfulness to me is justified and indisputable. It is a sign of solidarity, of not looking the other way. If you think a …
Between lust for life and war
"People are celebrating in order to forget and enjoying life because many know that these moments are fleeting. Perhaps they also try to push away the fact that, with all the security and quality of life there is now, Erbil would almost have suffered the same fate as Mosul in 2014." Kris, Head of Mission in Erbil, is …
Our personal Easter present: we finally arrived
We have been fairly quiet since the “Mobile Hospital” left for northern Iraq even though a lot has happened. But the most important news is that we have successfully arrived.




