Coming home for TLC
Soldiers wounded in Afghanistan to recuperate in local hospitals
By JOHN GILLIS Health Reporter
Article Link
Hundreds of soldiers from the Maritimes will soon be leaving for Afghanistan and the dangerous nature of the mission means dozens of them are expected to come back home with serious injuries.
During their February-to-August stint, many of those who are injured or become ill overseas will be transferred to Maritime civilian hospitals to be treated close to their loved ones.
It will mark the first time since the Korean War in the early 1950s local hospitals have handled combat casualties, said Cmdr. David Wilcox, the senior military physician for Atlantic Canada.
"It’s new," he said Wednesday. "We’ve never really been engaged in this type of war for quite a while."
The bulk of the new contingent of soldiers is coming from CFB Gagetown, so those who are injured are being handled by Land Forces Atlantic. Treatment for soldiers during the last two rotations was co-ordinated through Ontario and Alberta.
Military and local hospital officials are expecting about 10 sick or injured soldiers a month, based on the last two rotations.
Cmdr. Wilcox said summers in Afghanistan tend to see more full-fledged combat, whereas more injuries come from car bombs and other explosives in the winter.
Soldiers could be lying in hospital beds in Halifax or Saint John, N.B., surprisingly soon after being injured in Afghanistan.
"They’ll probably be in Canada within three days," Cmdr. Wilcox said. "We try to get them out of there as quickly as possible."
Doing that will involve a journey through three continents, with the co-operation of numerous agencies at each stage.
Cmdr. Wilcox said the hospital in Kandahar is only meant to provide life-saving care. Once stabilized there, Canadian troops are transported to an American military hospital in Landstuhl, Germany.
More on link
Soldiers wounded in Afghanistan to recuperate in local hospitals
By JOHN GILLIS Health Reporter
Article Link
Hundreds of soldiers from the Maritimes will soon be leaving for Afghanistan and the dangerous nature of the mission means dozens of them are expected to come back home with serious injuries.
During their February-to-August stint, many of those who are injured or become ill overseas will be transferred to Maritime civilian hospitals to be treated close to their loved ones.
It will mark the first time since the Korean War in the early 1950s local hospitals have handled combat casualties, said Cmdr. David Wilcox, the senior military physician for Atlantic Canada.
"It’s new," he said Wednesday. "We’ve never really been engaged in this type of war for quite a while."
The bulk of the new contingent of soldiers is coming from CFB Gagetown, so those who are injured are being handled by Land Forces Atlantic. Treatment for soldiers during the last two rotations was co-ordinated through Ontario and Alberta.
Military and local hospital officials are expecting about 10 sick or injured soldiers a month, based on the last two rotations.
Cmdr. Wilcox said summers in Afghanistan tend to see more full-fledged combat, whereas more injuries come from car bombs and other explosives in the winter.
Soldiers could be lying in hospital beds in Halifax or Saint John, N.B., surprisingly soon after being injured in Afghanistan.
"They’ll probably be in Canada within three days," Cmdr. Wilcox said. "We try to get them out of there as quickly as possible."
Doing that will involve a journey through three continents, with the co-operation of numerous agencies at each stage.
Cmdr. Wilcox said the hospital in Kandahar is only meant to provide life-saving care. Once stabilized there, Canadian troops are transported to an American military hospital in Landstuhl, Germany.
More on link