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An Irish team training combat medics in Kyiv: ‘No one thinks the war will end soon'

An Irish team training combat medics in Kyiv: ‘No one thinks the war will end soon'

Irish Timesa day ago

At the start of each trauma course run by the UCD Ukraine Trauma Project, the participants stand to attention for a minute's silence for fallen comrades – heads bowed, hands by their sides, or with hand on chest. When the speaker says 'Slava Ukraini' they answer 'Heroyam Slava' in unison. On the wall of the training centre in Kyiv there's a Ukrainian and an Irish flag, side by side.
In advance of our arrival, three volunteer drivers have driven trucks packed with specialised clinical and training materials from UCD in Dublin to Kyiv.
The trauma course is intensive: eight hours per day for two days. We run three courses over the course of a week – and an extra half-day cardiac resuscitation course.
The project was established in 2022 to provide training in pre-hospital emergency care of trauma-related casualties. We've a team of nine – plus interpreters – for 146 participants. We get to know them well. We break into small groups. We mix at coffee breaks and at lunch.
READ MORE
Participants from previous courses drop in to see us if they happen to be in Kyiv. Some of the participants are referred by colleagues who have attended previous courses; this is our seventh trip to Ukraine.
Most of the course participants are in their 20s and 30s; a third are women. Many have distinctive tattoos. 'It'll be easier to identify me if I'm killed,' a young combat medic tells me.
They're a mix of civilian and military first responders and trainers. Many have come from the front line. Most had no medical experience before the war. I meet a computer programmer, an IT consultant, a plumber, people from all walks of life. Some have more than one job; a business consultant and a psychiatrist both also work as volunteer combat medics.
Some are injured or undergoing medical treatment. An obstetrician/gynaecologist who does regular night shifts on air defence has a large gash on his leg from a recent drone attack. A woman hooked up to an IV drip says it's the last day of her treatment; she takes notes with her free hand.
The psychiatrist-combat medic tells me that she herself suffers from PTSD, which, she says, helps her treat the physical and mental trauma of her patients.
Some are grieving loved ones. A young woman is wearing a keyring owned by her boyfriend, an army commander who was killed recently. A fitness instructor, she says his death motivated her to train as a combat medic.
Some are injured and grieving. A young vet who had a knee replacement is back working after his leg was shattered by shrapnel; his girlfriend, who was 16 weeks pregnant, was killed in a separate attack. Like him, she was a combat medic. His eyes well up with tears when he tells us his story. Ours do too. .
Participants at the recent trauma course in Kyiv.
A woman with pink hair jokes that she tucks it under her helmet so that the Russian drone operators will not spot her. Her humour is mixed with defiance.
One thing that is striking is that no one complains – about the conditions they work under, the geopolitical uncertainty, the fact that combat medics and the injured are targeted by the Russians.
They are keen to learn. One of the vets says that human medicine is easier because you only have to know about one species.
They come from different backgrounds and, if in the military, from different ranks – but you wouldn't know it. In discussions, each is respectful of what the other has to say. They clap each other when they do presentations or demonstrate the new skills they have learned.
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Irish medics take training course in advanced paramedics to Ukraine to help keep injured soldiers alive
Opens in new window
]
On the day I read on my phone about toxicity among medical staff in an Irish hospital, a dentist – who is now a medical instructor – compliments the members of our small group teaching session on their skill and courage; the group includes a historian, one of the vets, an electrician, a mechanic and a kindergarten teacher.
They know that many Ukrainians have come to Ireland since the start of the war and that the Irish Government stands with Ukraine.
I meet no one who thinks the war will end soon.
Uliana, a tactical medicine trainer and artist, explains that Ukraine must only negotiate from a position of strength – otherwise, the Russians will come back. She is softly spoken but there is a steely determination in her voice.
On the day it is announced that 40 Russian bombers were hit by Ukrainian drones, no one mentions it. They are focused on the job they are doing.
An ambulance evacuation medic who works on the front line googles UCD. 'It says UCD is a global university. Is that why you're all here?' he asks me. He's carrying an emergency kit bag with a UCD sticker. I give him a UCD pin badge. It's as good an explanation as any.
The UCD Ukraine Trauma Project was set up by Prof Gerard Bury – and is supported by UCD, UCD Foundation, HSE Global Health, the Irish Red Cross, and philanthropy; Prof Chris Fitzpatrick is its vice-chair.

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Letters to the Editor, June 11th: On hospital consultants, gender issues and book censorship
Letters to the Editor, June 11th: On hospital consultants, gender issues and book censorship

Irish Times

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Letters to the Editor, June 11th: On hospital consultants, gender issues and book censorship

Sir, – Paediatricians are perceived as the kinder and less worldly members of the medical profession. That they have developed a toxic work environment for themselves and their nursing and junior medical colleagues is sad and dangerous. Few of their GP colleagues knew or suspected it. As Priscilla Lynch has pointed out (' Children's health crisis will roll on until we have transparency,' June 9th) neither did the Department of Health, the Minister, the NTPF and the HSE know about it until it was reported in the media. Paediatrics in Dublin operates in discrete sites without much recourse to GP or hospital colleagues and where poor professional behaviours can be normalised and kept secret. Paediatrics will now be decanted from three different hospitals with differing traditions, patient bases and cultures on to an expensive new facility. Expecting them to work harmoniously is a highly irresponsible pipe dream. READ MORE The history of hospital mergers in Dublin is an unhappy one with Beaumont and Tallaght taking years to settle. In the business world mergers are commonplace with attendant job threats keeping staff in line with employer expectations. In hospital mergers this does not apply as staff unions will negotiate for all existing staff to keep their jobs, with possibly some dislocation payments as well. This applies to the consultant staff too, meaning that management can't manage. How are managers expected to deal with a few highly unionised, well-paid doctors with track records of bullying junior staff and playing the system. Changing a toxic culture will not be easy. The sites of two of the hospitals being merged on to the new hospital may soon be up for sale in a rampant property market. It is not clear who will be the beneficiaries. A proportion of the proceeds of such sales needs to be earmarked to allow management of those who are burnt out, those wishing early retirement and those who do not embrace the unrivalled opportunities the new facility offers. Funding of multidisciplinary ethics and professional seminars are needed to develop an ethos to make a success of the new hospital. This is after all a professional issue where respect for colleagues, junior and senior, has been damaged. The fiascos of previous mergers would be avoided, and patients will be sure to receive the care they deserve. The introverted and secretive nature of existing paediatric practice needs to be addressed with good open management, adherence to employment contracts and governance that draws on international experience. Yours, etc TOM O'DOWD MD GPs at Tallaght Cross, Dublin. Reporting on gender issues Sir, – I was delighted to see Hugh Linehan's article asking some long overdue soul-searching questions about Irish media's reticence on covering gender issues (' Why is there so little coverage of gender identity issues in the Irish media ?' June 10th) and highlighting the shameful quiet cancelling of Stella O'Malley. Throughout that difficult period Stella was helping hundreds of families in Ireland and around the world through Genspect, the Irish based organisation she founded. These families were desperately trying to support loved ones experiencing gender dysphoria, but had been devastated by ideological capture among mental health and medical professionals. As a psychotherapist watching this happen within her profession Stella spoke up and did something when she thought people were being harmed, the same way others have bravely spoken up in the past. I hope now the tide seems to be turning away from loud activist voices and towards the evidence on gender issues that Irish media gets back to basics reporting the facts even when the facts aren't popular. – Yours, etc, LOUISE WHELAN, Greystones, Co Wicklow. Sir, – Why is Hugh Linehan's article on the lack of coverage of gender identity issues hidden in the Business section? – Yours, etc, DR JOHN DOHERTY, Gweedore, Co Donegal. Sir, –Congratulations on Hugh Linehan's long overdue article on the topic of gender identity and the silence of the Irish media. This refusal to cover the issue of gender identity in Irish society and all its implications is shameful and reflects the worst type of censorship – self censorship. The boycotting and failure to cover anything that might be construed as gender critical views, authors, news items, women's sports, women's groups, etc., has echoes of the worst excesses of the State censorship in the last century. I now look forward to more coverage and analysis of the issues and developments involved in gender identity theory such as the Cass Report, the banning of puberty blockers, the UK Supreme Court ruling, the attitude of our political parties, etc. JULIA ANDERSON Co Wicklow. Sir, – I was appalled to read Hugh Linehan's description of the Cass Report as 'a years-long, evidence based review of youth gender services led by a respected paediatrician' without any acknowledgement of the controversy and allegations of bias that surround the report, as well as its criticism internationally by many professional bodies, healthcare providers, academics and researchers. Particularly jarring in a piece calling for honesty of discussion, such an omission is, at best, misleading and deeply irresponsible. – Yours, etc, EOGHAN O'SULLIVAN, Dublin. Sir, – Hugh Linehan's article erroneously describes Stella O'Malley as 'an activist with a clear ideological stance'. Providing children and their parents with accurate information about potentially harmful or unnecessary interventions honours the clinician's obligation to act in the patient's best interests and upholds their duty to do no harm. This is not activism, it's ethical practice. If advocating for evidence-based, compassionate care makes one an 'activist', then every parent, doctor, psychotherapist, and indeed every journalist, deserves the badge. And if activism is the measure of a concerned and moral adult, what does it say about those who don't qualify? – Yours, etc, SANDRA ADAMS, Baldoyle, Dublin 13. Gardening leave Sir, – I recently retired from the health sector and I now have a huge interest in gardening. I can work at my own pace. If a plant is in the wrong place I can reposition it or get rid of it altogether. Other plants can be kept in check by a good 'clipping.' I can have great ideas and change them next season if they don't work out. I can ease off in the winter and start afresh in the spring. So if you want job satisfaction gardening is the answer. – Yours, etc, MARY WALSH, Stillorgan, Dublin. Parking and entitlement Sir, – I am lucky enough to live on a residential street in Dublin comprised of terraced housing. Parking is on-street and is essentially a free for all. Our nine-year-old son has a disability and a part of his condition is that he is a flight risk. Some households on our street have up to five cars, parking where they like while choosing to place a cone outside their own residence, thereby preventing others from parking there. We have politely requested that members from a multi-car household avoid parking outside our house if possible. Because of our son's disability. But when I made this request again today after a car had been left outside our door for four days I was informed that because people pay road tax they can park where they like. ''That's how it works,' they said. Yes. Indeed. They said that because there is not an accessible sign painted outside our house they can continue to park there. Also true. Not all disabilities are highly visible. They are not all the same. Although we are entitled to apply for a blue badge, because my son has no mobility issues. we cannot avail of an accessible parking space outside our home. The irony is that he is in danger because he is very mobile. A flight risk. With no sense of personal safety. And he is very fast. I look forward to the day when I do not have to constantly advocate for my son. When outdated bylaws catch up. And when above all the world is a kinder place. Where requests by parents of vulnerable children with additional needs are met with empathy, understanding, consideration and respect. – Yours, etc, REBECCA KEHOE, Dublin 3 Sir, – Brendan Murphy writes about careless parking. (Letters, June 10th). I live in a 1960s house, having purchased it in 1967. My house, like most of the time, had a garage, into which you put your car at night time. There was room on the driveway for the car during the day. However, nowadays, as my generation motor away to the great car park in the sky, our houses are being purchased by families who arrive with several large SUV type cars. The first thing they do is to convert the garage into a room or office. Thus, with their large cars they park one on the driveway and their other cars are parked on the road, one outside their own house, the others outside the houses of our neighbours. While I understand that the roadway is open parking for everyone, this situation quickly escalates to obstructions for those driving past, resulting in zig-zag manoeuvring and braking hard as one tries to drive up or down the road. A further complication is that if two cars park directly opposite each other the road is blocked. I've seen it happen. Believe me, it can only get worse. – Yours, etc, TONY CORCORAN, Rathfarnham, Dublin 14. Censorship and books Sir, – Ray Burke's report ( An Irishman's Diary, June 10th) of President Michael D Higgins's anecdote about being refused a copy of Bertrand Russell's book, Why I Am not a Christian, in the 1960s by the Galway librarian reminded me of my experience in the main library in Waterford when I requested a copy of Lewis Carrolls' Alice in Wonderland in the 1970s. I got the book alright, but not before the librarian had closely questioned me as to why I wanted it. I can only speculate that this was due to the fact that I was a male in his 20s at the time. Surely this was a case of honi soit qui mal y pense? There was rather a lot of that around books at the time. – Yours, etc, Séamus MCKENNA, Maynooth, Co Kildare. Sir, Ray Burke's Irishman's Diary, on book censorship reminded me of a story my former French teacher at St Columb's College in Derry told. He said he was stopped crossing the Border at the Irish Customs post in Aughnacloy when the customs officer spotted a copy of Émile Zola's Germinal sitting on the passenger seat. 'You might want to put that out of view,' said the official tactfully, 'Her books are not allowed here.' – Yours etc, JOE MCLAUGHLIN. Scotland. Trump and the US electorate Sir, – Lest we forget, because of our own focus on the damage he has already caused and the future potential damage to our economic and democratic lifestyle, US president Donald Trump has imposed and continues to inflict as much, if not more, trauma and prejudice on his own US citizens. He had already allowed Elon Musk run riot as de facto head of the 'department of government efficiency,' (Doge). As late as last Friday he asked the US Supreme Court to permit his administration to proceed with dismantling the department of education and now we see his plans to deploy some 700 US Marines (a military force trained to kill) on the streets of Los Angeles in addition to the already deployed National Guard troops. It gives me no pleasure to say so, but hopefully the narcissistic and vindictive behaviour of this president will prompt future US electorates to be very careful of what it wishes for and in the process sustain the greater civilised world. – Yours, etc, MICHAEL GANNON, Kilkenny. A picture paints 1,000 words Sir, – The photograph of the rescue from rubble near Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip yesterday (Irish Times, June 10th) after the Israeli strike reduced me to tears. Look at the little girl in the man's arms up close. Shame on all of us who allow this to happen. Shame on so - called ''humanity'. I try mostly not to look to stop the upset, the rage building more and more against all of those who allow this to happen. Well done to all those who protest great and small. Thank you for highlighting this awful atrocity. Keep doing it please. I wonder will this little girl survive? – Yours, etc, GERALDINE MCGINLEY, Dunfanaghy, Co Donegal. Junior Cycle English test Sir, – The Irish National Organisation of Teachers of English (INOTE) has noted with dismay the inclusion of a question exclusively on short stories on last week's Junior Cycle English paper. Asking a question about 'how setting vitally influences character action' in short stories in a state exam is unwise and unfair. Narrowing the focus to short stories exclusively will have disadvantaged a significant number of students, something we absolutely reject as useful in a state exam. A much fairer question would have allowed students to discuss setting in a short story OR a novel. Every year INOTE has felt disappointed with some questions asked of our students in the JC English exam. Despite plenty of reasonable and fair questions, too often we have noted questions that are either much too narrow in focus or much too ambitious in scope for students, questions that are known in teaching circles as 'Gotcha!' questions. After a three-year journey in the classroom that values creativity, discussion and critical thinking, asking these types of questions is simply unfair on hardworking students desperate to showcase what they've learned. We sometimes wonder whether the SEC is aware of what 15 year old English students are capable of in such a highly time-pressured exam. We would urge the SEC to reduce the number of questions on the HL JC paper, embed more student choice and flexibility and also to be more realistic in their question design. Our students deserve the chance to shine. It is the least they deserve. – Yours etc, MIKEY MEALLY, INOTE chairman Co Laois.

An Irish team training combat medics in Kyiv: ‘No one thinks the war will end soon'
An Irish team training combat medics in Kyiv: ‘No one thinks the war will end soon'

Irish Times

timea day ago

  • Irish Times

An Irish team training combat medics in Kyiv: ‘No one thinks the war will end soon'

At the start of each trauma course run by the UCD Ukraine Trauma Project, the participants stand to attention for a minute's silence for fallen comrades – heads bowed, hands by their sides, or with hand on chest. When the speaker says 'Slava Ukraini' they answer 'Heroyam Slava' in unison. On the wall of the training centre in Kyiv there's a Ukrainian and an Irish flag, side by side. In advance of our arrival, three volunteer drivers have driven trucks packed with specialised clinical and training materials from UCD in Dublin to Kyiv. The trauma course is intensive: eight hours per day for two days. We run three courses over the course of a week – and an extra half-day cardiac resuscitation course. The project was established in 2022 to provide training in pre-hospital emergency care of trauma-related casualties. We've a team of nine – plus interpreters – for 146 participants. We get to know them well. We break into small groups. We mix at coffee breaks and at lunch. READ MORE Participants from previous courses drop in to see us if they happen to be in Kyiv. Some of the participants are referred by colleagues who have attended previous courses; this is our seventh trip to Ukraine. Most of the course participants are in their 20s and 30s; a third are women. Many have distinctive tattoos. 'It'll be easier to identify me if I'm killed,' a young combat medic tells me. They're a mix of civilian and military first responders and trainers. Many have come from the front line. Most had no medical experience before the war. I meet a computer programmer, an IT consultant, a plumber, people from all walks of life. Some have more than one job; a business consultant and a psychiatrist both also work as volunteer combat medics. Some are injured or undergoing medical treatment. An obstetrician/gynaecologist who does regular night shifts on air defence has a large gash on his leg from a recent drone attack. A woman hooked up to an IV drip says it's the last day of her treatment; she takes notes with her free hand. The psychiatrist-combat medic tells me that she herself suffers from PTSD, which, she says, helps her treat the physical and mental trauma of her patients. Some are grieving loved ones. A young woman is wearing a keyring owned by her boyfriend, an army commander who was killed recently. A fitness instructor, she says his death motivated her to train as a combat medic. Some are injured and grieving. A young vet who had a knee replacement is back working after his leg was shattered by shrapnel; his girlfriend, who was 16 weeks pregnant, was killed in a separate attack. Like him, she was a combat medic. His eyes well up with tears when he tells us his story. Ours do too. . Participants at the recent trauma course in Kyiv. A woman with pink hair jokes that she tucks it under her helmet so that the Russian drone operators will not spot her. Her humour is mixed with defiance. One thing that is striking is that no one complains – about the conditions they work under, the geopolitical uncertainty, the fact that combat medics and the injured are targeted by the Russians. They are keen to learn. One of the vets says that human medicine is easier because you only have to know about one species. They come from different backgrounds and, if in the military, from different ranks – but you wouldn't know it. In discussions, each is respectful of what the other has to say. They clap each other when they do presentations or demonstrate the new skills they have learned. [ Irish medics take training course in advanced paramedics to Ukraine to help keep injured soldiers alive Opens in new window ] On the day I read on my phone about toxicity among medical staff in an Irish hospital, a dentist – who is now a medical instructor – compliments the members of our small group teaching session on their skill and courage; the group includes a historian, one of the vets, an electrician, a mechanic and a kindergarten teacher. They know that many Ukrainians have come to Ireland since the start of the war and that the Irish Government stands with Ukraine. I meet no one who thinks the war will end soon. Uliana, a tactical medicine trainer and artist, explains that Ukraine must only negotiate from a position of strength – otherwise, the Russians will come back. She is softly spoken but there is a steely determination in her voice. On the day it is announced that 40 Russian bombers were hit by Ukrainian drones, no one mentions it. They are focused on the job they are doing. An ambulance evacuation medic who works on the front line googles UCD. 'It says UCD is a global university. Is that why you're all here?' he asks me. He's carrying an emergency kit bag with a UCD sticker. I give him a UCD pin badge. It's as good an explanation as any. The UCD Ukraine Trauma Project was set up by Prof Gerard Bury – and is supported by UCD, UCD Foundation, HSE Global Health, the Irish Red Cross, and philanthropy; Prof Chris Fitzpatrick is its vice-chair.

Spending time every day away from noise is good for your health
Spending time every day away from noise is good for your health

Irish Times

time2 days ago

  • Irish Times

Spending time every day away from noise is good for your health

Do you have somewhere quiet where you can go? Spending time every day away from noise is good for your health. After air pollution, road, rail and air traffic noise is the second most important cause of ill health in western Europe, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). Industry, construction, public works and neighbourhood noise all add to what it calls 'environmental noise'. Heart attack , stroke , reduced cognitive performance in children, severe annoyance and sleep disturbance can result from prolonged exposure to such noise, according to the WHO. It is estimated to cause 12,000 premature deaths, and to contribute to 48,000 new cases of heart disease in Europe every year, says the organisation. READ MORE Noise is a health problem for at least one in five EU citizens, according to the European Commission . Yikes. It's hard for urban dwellers to avoid noise, but they are not the only ones affected. In areas affected by noise, the proportion of people 'highly annoyed' by noise is greater in rural areas than noisy urban areas, according to the European Environment Agency . This suggests that unnatural sound, such as wind turbines, perhaps, is more annoying in the context of rural areas and perhaps masks other, more beneficial, natural sounds, according to the 2016 Quiet Areas in Europe report by the Agency. The Environmental Noise Directive is the main EU law for noise pollution. It requires countries to publish noise maps and action plans every five years. It isn't prescriptive about noise limits or mitigations, however. That's for member states to decide for themselves. Action will have to be ramped up if the number of people affected by transport noise is to be reduced by its target of 30 per cent by 2030, says the European Commission. [ Dublin Airport noise could cause heart issues for nearly 17,000 people living nearby Opens in new window ] One action is identifying and preserving areas where there is good environmental noise quality. This kind of tranquillity is often found where there is vegetation, low levels of man-made sounds and the dominance of natural sounds, according to the Quiet Areas report. The visual intrusion of man-made structures and buildings into an otherwise perceived natural landscape can also reduce the sense of tranquillity. Ireland ranked fourth in EU countries where people living in cities of more than 50,000 inhabitants had access to quiet areas within a one-hour drive, according to the report. Those living in Belgium, Germany and Luxembourg had the least access to quiet areas. It's important for all of us to get respite from noise pollution and the Environmental Noise Directive allows for the designation and protection of quiet areas. Limerick City and County Council has some areas in mind. Since 2020 Limerick has been inviting its citizens to use the free Hush City app to record information on areas in the city and county where they find peace and tranquillity. This information is then available to policymakers, and it shows others where they can find peace and quiet too. As part of Limerick's Noise Action Plan 2024-2028, the council will assess sound in parks and other green spaces in Adare, Newcastle West, Croom and Abbeyfeale, gathering supportive evidence to have them officially designated as Quiet Areas. [ 'Like living near a helicopter': Residents fed up at takeaway delivery drones buzzing over their homes Opens in new window ] Limerick was ranked 'excellent' by the Environmental Protection Agency for its 2023 noise action plan progress report. The city and county have been using low-noise road surfaces, introducing traffic calming to reduce speeds, conducting noise monitoring surveys and prioritising cycling and walking routes. Noise is about culture and respect among people too. In some areas of Germany, you wouldn't dream of mowing your grass or cutting hedges between 1pm and 3pm as it is typical for older generations to sleep at this time. If you haven't stopped work, you will likely get a gentle reminder from a neighbour to do so. It's a two-way street, where neighbours assure each other some quiet time every day. So whether it's your phone on speaker on public transport, your strimmer going on a Sunday morning, or your dog barking all day, spare a thought for those around you. Don't make noise, make peace.

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