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Search resuls for: "Tanisha Fazal"


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Military medicine experts told Insider Ukraine's medical care in war has been better than Russia's. But Ukraine's medical advantage could be undercut by the sheer number of potential Russian soldiers. The UK's MOD said last year that Russian soldiers were being advised to use women's sanitary products as first aid supplies. AdvertisementAdvertisementAnother concern when it comes to battlefield medical care is how close the wounded are to a hospital. But for Russian and Soviet soldiers, medical support has largely seemed to be an afterthought.
Persons: Russia's, , Aaron Epstein, Epstein's, Epstein, Tanisha Fazal, Fazal, Fazel Organizations: Service, Global, UK Ministry of Defence, MOD, University of Minnesota Locations: Wall, Silicon, Ukraine, Russia, Russian, Soviet
Ukraine is now believed to be one of the most mined country in the world since the Russia invasion. Some of the worst injuries coming out of the war have been amputations, many caused by the countless land mines Russia placed across broad swaths of Ukraine. Despite having signed the treaty, Ukraine has been accused by Human Rights Watch of using banned "butterfly" mines against Russia. Epstein said that the mines are only going to get more and more buried under dirt and snow. While Epstein said Ukraine has a good medical system, the demand for care will likely be overwhelming.
Persons: Dr, Aaron Epstein, Epstein, GSMSG, Rebecca Gonzalez, Spencer Platt, Fazal Organizations: Service, Global, Group, The Washington Post, Human Rights, Staten Island University Hospital, Getty, Wall Street, University of Minnesota Locations: Ukraine, Russia, Wall, Silicon, Florida, Ukrainian, New York City, New York
A New York Times report detailed how Ukrainian soldiers are coping with the mental trauma of war. One soldier who has nightmares said he saw evacuation vehicles mistakenly drive over wounded soldiers. "I remember the faces of all our dead comrades," another Ukrainian soldier told the Times. The sergeant, 28-year-old Vladyslav Ruziev, was among the Ukrainian soldiers who told the Times they were traumatized by what they'd seen in the ongoing war with Russia. The lack of progress and the number of wounded Ukrainian soldiers have started to take a toll on the country's morale, The Washington Post reported last week.
Persons: they'd, Ruziev, Ruslan Proektor, Russia's, Tanisha Fazal, Fazel, I'm Organizations: New York Times, Times, Service, The New York Times, Washington Post, Street, University of Minnesota Locations: Wall, Silicon, Russia, Ukraine, Russian
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