tv [untitled] July 9, 2022 11:30am-12:01pm EEST
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and somehow we buy people to learn to learn how to save themselves, how to save their loved ones and what to do when, god forbid, a practical life-threatening situation has occurred, because i wanted to ask you if you have enough hands to save the wounded and whether you need replenishment in your at the moment, we have a certain pause with the recruitment of people , because a lot of volunteers responded to uh, our zach and i think that gradually we will recruit people. is very critical and we understand that uh, how many men if we are talking about the fact that there are enough of something, for example, are there enough hands? are the walkers just the situation that exists today because we do not know what russia will do tomorrow, how are they still going to change their minds about
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shelling us to kill yes, but not we understand that the situation changes every day and we can even say not every day and now it changes very quickly and every hour i want you to know what else to ask, but the hospitalists were also at azovstal and together with all of them we were captured we know that one of them tyra, fortunately, she was released. please tell me how many of your medics are in captivity and did they all manage to return. i would like to make a small comment. tyras, she is our sister, but she is from the angels organization. tyler. the commander of the hospitallers, we styled and worked on the neighboring areas in the mariupol direction, and i really cheered when she was in polonia, unfortunately, the situation regarding the prisoners is a
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rather difficult situation and i have to choose my words to say about this, first of all, because it is possible that some information may threaten those who are currently in captivity because of the connection with the gustiliers. from the answer precisely because of what i said for the sake of the safety of those people who are now in the background. i hope that if there are any changes, we will definitely write it on our page, but for now, first of all, we are concerned about the fact that those people who are in captivity who have contact with us any uh they don't had er additional reasons in prison for these tortures everything else what does er actually do with our animals in russia ms. elena, i also believe with you that as i think like all our ukrainians who are watching us now believe that all
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will return from captivity and everyone will be alive and healthy, i thank you for your work and for joining our broadcast, thank you and we were contacted by the paramedic of the volunteer medical battalion of hospitalists olena gerasimyuk and as you already understood today we we are talking about hospitalists. who are these people? whom do they help? during their existence, hospitalists have conducted more than 45 trainings on pre-medical care and prepared for work in hot spots . more than 800 paramedics are trained in one training session. 10-20 volunteers are trained. how do they become hospitalists and what do we need to say for this? irina tsybuh iru, a paramedic of the volunteer medical battalion of hospitalists, is now in touch with us. i congratulate you. good afternoon. we have already seen in our story that trainings are held for
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paramedics, tell me if anyone who wants to can to get to such a training. to go through training and become a hospitalist, and are there any special selection criteria? first of all, you need to understand that a paramedic is a person who is constantly learning and it is impossible to learn and become a paramedic forever in a few days or weeks. but this is a long process the time when you decided from the moment you somehow decided to become a winner to the moment when you and well, in my case, i'm probably ready to leave this matter there for some reason ah and accordingly we need to study every day for now, we have adapted to the conditions war, and with an understanding of how necessary it is now to provide high -quality medicine and assistance according
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to the march protocol, and that is why our training lasted four or five days, and the battalion counted on logistics. this means that if we need drivers, we recruit drivers. why these people to provide help in accordance with their competence and their task. if we need doctors and surgeons, for example, that is why we take these people and train them according to an enhanced program before the full-scale war in our country lasted a week and for this week, in addition to qualitative knowledge about the march and this protocol, a couple of doctors of the future also received stress tests, which, in my opinion, is quite important and a key language for becoming a permanent officer, because so far we have had the experience of teaching people without a stress test who they simply received high-quality access to the briefing protocol and went into battle with an understanding of how to provide
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assistance. but at the same time, they needed information about what would happen to their bodies and their psyches when they hit the field on the battlefield, so i hope that now we will have the opportunity to restore the training center in which we will be able to continue not only to teach how to provide help, but also to teach and show what a stress test is, even from our own experience we can say 10% of what you will be to experience on the battlefield, but it is , nevertheless, some part of the opportunity to understand yourself and your reactions when you a in the conditional op when you pull a fighter out of this trap when it pours towards you, firecrackers burst and well, all these other indicators of this rhinestone test that a fighter passes when we are studying. that is why it is also a very important part. i hope that now we will restore the base. i hope that now those people who have come new to full-scale wars will
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be able to get advanced training and we will now direct our forces to exactly this. we will collect crews that are already deployed, that already have some experience in providing assistance, and we can see how high-quality this experience is, because they are moving according to the protocol that we have taught them, but it is necessary to understand that professional development includes we have a much wider range of manipulations, working out what our fighters should already be able to do, and we put this as our first priority, and the second priority is directly the recruitment of new participants, because it must be understood that the hospitalists of the volunteer battalions a and b in us have some, well, to a certain extent, and indolence personnel and that's why we will make new sets in the same way and we announce it on our pages on facebook or instagram because if someone wants to join us welcome we are very happy for new people but you don't have to follow that on facebook or instagram, a child goes through more than
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once, and periodically you need to update your knowledge in one of those who are directly on the battlefield and carry out this evacuation of the wounded, so tell us what your crew is and how it all happens . providing aid, i will tell you about my crew, i have a fifth crew and we provide two of them, and i will then tell about the third one. so we have some kind of evacuation. i work at case evacuation, this means that i evacuate people from the battlefield. and we we have a pick-up car that is more passable than a medical car than a medical car in those difficult areas of the front, and this is the logic of the evacuation case, that we go off-road with a less visible camouflaged car in order to go without trenches or directly from the gods. we go with soldiers
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in battle to evacuate soldiers with polyps so that it was a sudden evacuation so that the soldier did not have the opportunity to be wounded for some time yes that is, we react very quickly and no more than exactly eight to five minutes pass when we get to the soldier and we begin to provide him with assistance, at the same time it is necessary to understand that we have taken on the responsibility of training the medics of the corps who are also with these people on the battlefield, and before that you showed the video, we taught the marines, because we are my crew, we work with the marines, we taught them to provide assistance and i know that at the moment, for the first five minutes, as long as i get to the wounded, they will provide high-quality help and then work begins. sometimes we start working immediately on the battlefield, it depends on the task we are performing because we are moving on to assaults with these beautiful soldiers, the marines are all incredibly cool fighters, and i always say to us that we must pray for the
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marines because they, as you can see now on the video, are studying despite the fact that they are tired, they are playing sports despite the fact that they have been advanced and so on, and we support them all the time, we teach them, we remember them because, uh, now medicine is fine motor skills, it's about muscle memory, about how you can use your hands under a stressful situation when you're scared , uh, don't put yourself turnstile and it's about how you are can you remember how to restore the patency of the respiratory tract to your brother and so on. so we actually provide the first stage. to be in contact combat well, my honey dog is usually standing in a city where they are shelling with hail and it is scary to lose the team it is scary that someone from the team will be
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injured and of course it is scary for the cars and what about us we can lose the means by which we directly evacuate and take out the wounded. in fact, i hand over the wounded to the medical evacuation, and already in the medical evacuation, they work with them for 2 hours in my crew, and so who came from germany to another, our ukrainian very cool surgeon, and they hand over people to a stabilization point or to a medical institution. and you have to understand that sometimes hospitalists also provide the third stage. and this is a stabilization point and a task number. olena, we talked about these certain stages that hospital patients go through, how it all works. i also want to ask you about medicines and hemostatic and dressing materials. what do you
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need for work, yes, and actually you need to understand that we are completely dependent on people, we do not count on state support, because we are a volunteer battalion, and here human resources are volunteer resources and the activity of people who know us and supporting us is key that it's not a thermal imager, i always say that the spinal device cannot be charged, you can't buy new batteries for it, we constantly work with sedumpers, each wounded s-e takes a certain amount of those sedumpers of hemostatic materials in infusion to restore the volume of fluid in body and this means that we constantly need help, we constantly need hemostatic agents, we constantly need to restore the resource, when i return from the rotation, we fill the entire car before the rotation, and everything that is needed, our backpacks, and all the shelves. we
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we take a few doda boxes back to kyiv. we go empty. it's a pity that we have work. it's a pity that i'm injured and that means that we're coming to kyiv in a carpet. we depend so much on the fact that we have these hemostatic agents, on the extent to which people will understand that this regularity of assistance is very important and that it is necessary to be with the hospitalists all the time and help us so that we can work on the front line. we are very are connected here with volunteers with people who just come to us 11 who are ready to spend something from poland who are ready to find some means to transfer the parcel, this is all a big organism, a lot of structural help, which in the end gives my backpack filled in order to save people's lives and we are very dependent on that, because we must understand that we are constantly working with materials that need to be restored, mrs. iryna, that is, i
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understood you correctly. and the state does not help you in any way, only people may help some international companies, perhaps some charitable organizations. and we feel the structure of civil society assistance there, it is very multi-level from international organizations that could come there for cooperation to hand us a certain number of pages to an individual who can transfer uah 10 to the battalion 's account that one thing or another actually plays the key to the role or the final result, we have all these means to restore life and to save life, the state does not take part in this because that she doesn't have such tools, because this is my volunteer battalion, neither me nor olena. none of us receives a salary, we do it on a
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voluntary basis. refuel have ammunition armor and this is not only about medical equipment and it is all a big organism and everyone who is in the battalion must be provided with what i have listed, every car must be refueled and, well, accordingly , there is a lot of work and because of this, the help of people to us we always need her very much, mrs. iryna. and when we talked about these stages, you said that you were taking the wounded to the stabilization points. so, what does the crew do next? you return to the field again. battle or what have you been doing since you started the rotation. we are on duty all the time, that is, there is no hour of the day for a lunch break, there is no situation in which we are on
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duty there. lead while my medical evacuation i transported the wounded to the stabilization point and stabilized him in the car, and they do a really large set of manipulations in the medical vehicle there. i was already on the battlefield and evacuated the next wounded from the battlefield. all the time on duty all the time in tension eh and day and night we remember journalists came to me and they said when you have a break let's go in one joint and it was so eh unexpected i couldn't think what and does anyone have an option if the medics can have a break at the front, the fighters are saved, the fighters can develop to sleep, you don’t listen to the radio, and the medics, no, we are on duty all the time, and as soon as my medical evacuation arrives, they immediately turn to the duty point and are on duty, waiting, hoping we all always hope that
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we will not have work and that we will just drink mojitos somewhere and rest, but unfortunately, the situation at the front is quite tense so far and because of that we have many tasks and we work constantly ira that is, i understand you correctly, this is non-stop work, you don’t have any rest at all, yes. and this is actually the reason why i am in the volunteer battalion, because i understand that after two weeks or a month there is a critical, critical, stressful load . i can come here. now i have come to apply. i am now in my apartment in kyiv, and i can take a breather, i can switch, i can go with a friend to drink coffee, while if i was on dan's contract and in another service, i felt this tension all the time without you need to be able to breathe understand that the intensity of medical care is psychologically significant, it is very difficult, starting
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from the fact that you know every wounded person you work with. the same story with the people who died, we also have to evacuate them, and usually, we work. if this person died, it was, of course, a shoe injury, and here the same story is happening. my sister wrote to me recently, she wrote to one of the soldiers who died. he died. and actually hmm, his body was pieced together and she doesn't believe that it's her brother. i understand perfectly well , and she wants me to tell her that it's not him, and i also understand that, but you have to understand the amount of load it is very difficult for medics psychologically. that is why i am glad that i am in the hospital, because i can switch gears, i can try to breathe a little , realize what happened to me and go back to the
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front line already on the 15th of july . and volunteers can be accompanied bear hospitalists, that is, paramedics are attached to some military units, or how exactly do you decide where to be on duty, well, this is the specific task of our combatant and her assistants, they established cooperation with the armed forces. forces are interested and well, i'm sorry, i have to say the word, they are asking for it. we worked with them, and because the quality of our provision of training of paramedics and medics who work in crews is very high at a high level and she sees it ah actually in my case i am recommended to one of the companies of the marine corps i am fully subordinated to the command of the marine corps and our crew and our members of this crew we are fixed and we have
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cooperation with the chief medical officer of this brigade and we fully have all the infrastructure together that we have established, from evacuation to notification to the provision of assistance to the description of injuries and what assistance was provided, this is all also not a small part of the work we do in order to ensure that it is all documented qualitatively, and then these fighters could have decent payments for the fact that they were wounded, yes, and actually according to my example. i think that we have very similar cooperation in all other areas. but there are essentially two types: either we are assigned to positions or we are assigned to a specific brigade, and usually this second option ira, i want to thank you for joining our broadcast today and wish you good health, patience and strength. thank you once again, and we were contacted by a paramedic of the volunteer medical battalion of the hospitallers, iryna, and you know that
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it's hard to say. well, the third stage of the work of hospitalists is the provision of medical care in stabilization points and field hospitals, and we would really like today for volunteer doctors to tell us about how they set up operating rooms in the middle of the field and get the wounded out of the other world, and we were still waiting for the inclusion of a doctor - a surgeon, but unfortunately he cannot get in touch with us, because you yourself understand the war and what the situation can be there at the front, so hospitalists are highly respected among the soldiers, they have a significant moral support of the entire people of ukraine, according to the commander of the medical battalion, hospitalist yana zinkevich, during the 8 years of the war in donbas, paramedics of the battalion on the front line saved more than 3,000 wounded, and from the moment of the full-scale invasion
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until the beginning of july, crews saved more than 2,200 lives, but this figure is not final and even changes just now, while this broadcast continues, more than two pairs of medics are working on the front lines as part of more than fifty crews, during the time of their existence, hospitalists have conducted more than 45 trainings with more than 800 paramedics are trained to provide first aid and work in hot spots. each paramedic has a dictation. a paramedic must be trained. he must know international protocols for providing aid under fire. this is very, very important. the more people know these protocols, the easier it is for units to interact, and the directors tell me that everything it is possible that the person we have been waiting for, the one who saves people, dmytro androschuk, mr. dmytro, will appear on the phone now. well, you see the third stage of the
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work of hospitalists, you and i have been there more than once in touch so you joined my studios, came to visit us and talked about completely different topics, and we will talk with you now. you are a doctor-surgeon of the volunteer medical battalion of hospitalists, dmytro androschuk, and once again i want to introduce you, dmytro. good day. laska good day, how are you in general, i want to ask you what the situation is, i understand that it is radically different and you have to operate in the field, operate urgently and deal with much more complicated cases and with a greater workload than before the war well, first of all, now i it's great because i'm here today is the second day as i returned home from the rotation and finally i can
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sleep normally and rest in the field of loved ones well , but in a few weeks i will return to the east again, only there, after all, and our help is needed from about the work, the work is specific, because it is not standard surgical work in the hospital, standard surgical work in a clean operating room, that is, it is, in fact, field stabilization work, that is, these are such small stabilization points that are currently active deploys our battalion a-a near a-a m-m military where actually our task is to do so that the wounded soldier, especially what concerns the seriously wounded, the middle categories of the wounded are those who themselves could not be
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transported far, for example to the hospital, so that they they got to him because it very often happens that the front line to the hospital may be 60-70 km of evacuation on broken bad roads, which in principle is a complex wounded person, most often, he simply will not make it, and therefore it is necessary to perform some minimal surgical anesthesiological measures in order to a-a he could safely get there alive and with minimal, let's say, negative consequences for his health in the future, because the important point is not just to prove a- ah wounded, but also to ensure that he is still there. well , he did not die in the near future because it happens such situations that we brought in, for example, conditionally speaking , we put a check mark there, well done, and then the question what will happen to the injured person tomorrow, will something happen to him there the
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day after tomorrow after our actions therefore, all these things must be clearly verified, they must all be ah, they were clearly executed in protocol regarding the saving of the lives of these fighters, and that’s exactly what field stabilization points are, they are generally accepted all over the world ah, and they really show the very colossal effectiveness of saving our fighters at the front, mr. dmitriev, in fact, i really liked you many questions, but since we couldn't contact you in time, i hope you will still join our broadcasts. i also want to thank you. take care and thank you for your work and we were contacted by a doctor-surgeon nachmed of the volunteer medical battalion of hospitalists dmytro androschuk, that is, how are you today
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