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By Sarah Elizabeth Brown - The Chronicle Journal
Monday, October 8, 2007
Dr. David
Puskas uses a drill to alter a pediatric femur nail —
a man-made bone to replace a child‘s broken femur —
so it will fit in a Taliban soldier‘s broken arm. Faced
with a Taliban soldier‘s injured upper arm, but lacking
the appropriate-sized titanium rod to stabilize the shattered
bone, Dr. David Puskas made his own. Taking a power drill
to a child‘s femoral “nail,” as the metal
rods are called, Puskas made new holes for screws, polished
the piece and inserted it into the soldier‘s arm.
Metres away from the “plywood box” of a military
hospital at Kandahar Airfield Base is the airstrip. “If
a fighter jet took off, it really did sound like it was going
in one ear and out the other,” said Puskas. Cargo planes
taking off shook the hospital. “That kind of environment
breeds ingenuity,” said Puskas, 44. “You have
to do what you have to do.”
The Thunder Bay orthopedic surgeon of 11 years returned in
August from a two-month stint reassembling soldiers and police
officers from Afghanistan, Canada and other coalition countries.
Occasionally, he was called on to patch up Taliban soldiers
and Afghan civilians. In those two months at Kandahar base
hospita,l Puskas did several hundred operations. On one occasion,
11 casualties arrived and went through the two operating rooms
in nine hours.
Sixty per cent of his cases in Afghanistan were things he‘d
never seen or read about before. He learned terms like “biologic
shrapnel” as he picked bits of one person‘s body
out of another‘s. In two months, he attended ramp ceremonies
for nine fallen Canadian soldiers.
Besides serving his country, Puskas found the level of “medical
altruism” of the people he worked with gratifying. “You
have an opportunity to work with people who are willing to
extend themselves . . . to do things that aren‘t a normal
part of their comfort zone, and it‘s very hard not to
find that to be an intoxicating medical experience,”
Puskas said in an interview.
It‘s a special environment, with no families, soccer
practice, meetings or paperwork to distract from fixing broken
bodies. “There was an enormous degree of collegiality
and co-operation – general surgeons working hand-in-hand
with orthopedic surgeons, the maxillofacial surgeon. Quite
different from normal civilian practice, where in many ways
we compete for access to resources for our patients.”
Knowing the military had downsized its medical staff in recent
decades and hearing of the need for civilian specialists in
Afghanistan at various medical meetings, he spent six months
screwing up the courage to talk to his wife about going. His
wife is also an orthopedic surgeon, and the two have sons
ages 6, 8 and 10. The family mulled it over for a few months,
and then it took another six months for Puskas to find a slot.
Wearing the requisite short hair and muscles, standing more
than six feet tall, Puskas looks like a military man. Swears
like one too. He looked at deploying as a member of the Canadian
Forces, but it would have meant leaving his civilian practice
for a long period.
Though there were two surgical teams who worked 24 hours in,
24 hours off, the doctors worked when there was work to be
done, Puskas said. It was brutally hot, emotionally exhausting
and seeing gun racks everywhere took getting used to, but
Puskas brushes that off as nothing compared to combat soldiers
who risk their lives daily.
“You don‘t have to believe in what we‘re
doing over there,” said Puskas. “I personally
do. I think it‘s a very good mission, I think it‘s
the right level of our commitment. But you can‘t be
there for more than 10 minutes and not see the incredible
focus and the attention of the (military personnel) there.”
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