Treatment of battle trauma in civil population

Authors

  • O. Vrublevskyi Hospital of Pomor Medical University, Szczecinб Poland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11603/2414-4533.2018.3.9447

Keywords:

Doctors without Borders

Abstract

This work is based on the own experience of the author during humanitarian missions and is an effort of generalization the results of
more than 1800 surgeries performed for the last three years in hot spots of the world.

References

1. Giannou, C. & Baldan, M. (2010). War surgery. Working with limited resources in armed conflict and other situations of violence. (Vol. 1), p. 358 Geneva, Switzerland : ICRC.
2. Giannou, C., Baldan, M. & Molde, Å. (2013). War surgery. Working with limited resources in armed conflict and other situations of violence. (Vol. 2), p. 640. Geneva, Switzerland : ICRC.
2. Schein, M., Rogers, P. & Assalia, A. (Eds.) (2005). Schein’s common sence Emergency abdominal Surgery (Sec. ed.). Berlin Heidelberg : Springer-Verlag, p. 650. DOI :10.1007/978-3-540-74821-2
3. (2013). Emergency War Surgery. Fourth United States Revision. USA : Department of Defence, p. 476.
4. (2015). MSF Protocols and Gudelines. Revised Paris.
5. (2016). Emergency Protocols and Guidelines. Revised Milano.
6. ICRC. (2010). WWAP. Guidelines for Afganistan. Geneva: ICRC.
7. Royal College of Surgeons of England (2018). ATLS, (X Edit.), ACSCT. Retrieved from : https://goo.gl/OfBK07
8. (2018). ETC, Lisbon, Portugal.
9. ICRC, WHO, AO Foundation. (2016). Management of Limb Injuries during disasters and conflicts. Geneva, Switzerland : ICRC.

Published

2018-10-17

How to Cite

Vrublevskyi, O. (2018). Treatment of battle trauma in civil population. Hospital Surgery. Journal Named by L.Ya. Kovalchuk, (3), 113–116. https://doi.org/10.11603/2414-4533.2018.3.9447

Issue

Section

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