Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Documentary about War Amputees: Call for volunteers

Email sent to the Amputee Blog:

"We’re looking for a soldier, wounded in action, with dreams of heading back to the battlefield. We are not so much concerned with whether or not the soldier will recover fully and return to duty. More so, we’re looking for a soldier with a compelling story and incredible drive. The subject can be male/female, located anywhere in the US, and in any stage of rehabilitation. As part of a feature documentary (intended for public television), we will film approximately 3 days of interviews and ‘day in the life’ segments over the duration of recovery. In general, I don’t give out this e-mail address so please pass on the following: videogamedsdoc[at]yahoo[dot]com"

Sunday, May 29, 2005

List of Amputees

**Note: these names were compiled by reading numerous articles. The list is not complete. Please contact me if you notice any errors.*****

Robert Acosta 20 BE hand
Alvin Alniz 29 leg BK
Eric Alva 32 leg AK
Ryan Autery 20 arm
Peter Bagarella 21 leg BK
Scott Barkalow 40 leg BK
Chuck Bartles* 26 arm
Jonathan Bartlett 19 legs AK, BK
Dale Beatty 26 legs
Hilario Bermanis 21 legs hand
Aaron Blakely 24 legs 2 feet
Matthew Boisvert 21 leg AK
Tim Boots 23 leg BK
Joe Bozik legs AK,BK hand
Matthew Braddock 24 leg BK
Bret Bretz 23 legs
Nicholas Bright arm
Thomas Brooks 21 leg
Willie Brooks 23 legs BK
Phillip Brown(X) legs
Andrew Butterworth 25 leg
Michael Buyas legs
Hilbert Caesar 27 leg
Michael Cain arm
Health Calhoun 25 legs AK
Erick Castro leg
Chris Chandler 23 leg BK
Randy Chasten 31 legs
David Chatham 34
Maurice Craft 26 leg
Christopher Crowling leg
Peter Damon arms
Jemel Daniels leg
Terry Dean leg
Jorge DeLeon leg
Keith Deutsch 20 leg AK
Robbie Doughty 29 legs BK,AK
Tammy Duckworth 36 legs
Brandon Erickson 22 arm
John Fernandez legs AK, BK
Christopher Fesmire 27 legs
Jay Fondren 24 legs
Daniel Gade 29 leg
Marc Giammatteo 27 leg BK
Lance Gieselmann leg AK
Danielle Green 27 1 hand
Brian Groves 24 leg
Dawn Halfaker 25
Colin Hamilton (UK) 28 leg AK
Derrick Hardin 19 leg BK
Chuck Hayter leg
Mary Herrera 23 arm (use)
Pete Herrick 34 leg
Dustin Hill 22 2 hands
Tanner Hoag arm
Matthew Houston 22 leg
BJ Jackson 22 legs
Chad Johnson leg BK
Brian Johnston 24 leg arm
Brent Jurgersen 42 leg
Ryan Kelly 23 leg AK
Brian Kolfage legs arm
Clemons Kortney 24 leg AK
Norberto Lara 31 arm
Dan Lasko leg
Alex Leonard leg BK
Chris Leverkuhn 21 leg AK
Sean Lewis 21 leg AK
Alan Lewis 23 legs BK,AK
Chris Livesay 31 leg ATK
Adolfo Lopez-Santini 26 leg
George Loria arm
Andy McCaffrey 32 arm
Mike Meinen 26 leg AK
Manuel Mendoza legs
Dan Metzborf* leg
Roy Mitchell leg
Lonnie Moore 29 leg
Evan Morgan 21 legs AK,BK
Michael NcNaughton 32 legs
Brian Neuman?
Mark O'Brien 22 leg AK arm
Anthony Odierno 26 arm
Oscar Olguin 19 leg
Joshua Olson 25 leg AK
Casey Owens 23 leg
Scott Palomino 21 leg
Kevin Pannell 26 legs BK, AK
Gary Payton leg
George Perez* 21 leg
Trevor Phillips
Austin Phillips 20 leg BK
Henry Phillips 27 leg
Anothy Pizzifred 20 leg
Edward Platt 21
Ed Pulido 36 leg
Isaiah Ramirez 21 leg BK
Jose Ramos 24 leg
Joseph Ramsey arm
Adam Reoplogle 25 1 hand
William Reynolds 24 leg
Luis Rodriguez 35 leg AK
Robert Roeder leg
Sam Ross 20 leg
Albert Ross leg BK
David Rozelle 31 foot
Ed Salau 34 leg
Jacob Schick 22 foot
Dean Schwartz 22
Daniel Seefeldt 41 leg BK
Justin Shellhammer 26 leg
Robert Shrode 29 arm
Chad Smith leg
Moses Sonera foot
Garth Stewart* 23 leg
Subido 23 1 foot
Scott Terryll(X) 19 arms
Casey Tibbs
Corey Webb 22 leg
Patrick Wickens leg
Brian Wilhelm leg
Luke Wilson leg AK
Johnny Wilson 25 leg BK
Joe Worley 22
James Wright 28 2 hands
Tristan Wyatt 21 leg ATK
Jeffery Sanders
James King leg
Robert Blikle hand
Melissa Stockwell 25 leg AK

Hospital in Germany copes with heavy flow of wounded from Iran, Afghanistan

Hospital in Germany copes with heavy flow of wounded from Iran, Afghanistan

MATT MOORE

Associated Press


LANDSTUHL, Germany - With its quiet, winding halls, Landstuhl Regional Medical Center at first looks like just another community hospital. But it has become a front line in the Iraq and Afghan wars thousands of miles away.

The patients - young soldiers with faces lacerated by flying glass and shrapnel from exploding roadside bombs, others missing a leg or arm - shuffle by, heading for an appointment or checkup. At this military hospital, there is a constant stream of new faces.

An average of about 23 patients arrive each day - most from Iraq, where more than 12,350 soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen have been injured since the U.S.-led war began in March 2003. The flow can spike sharply, as it did during the battle for Fallujah: 537 over two days.

[partial text only; follow link for full text]

Wounded in Iraq, a Marine bravely rebuilds his life

Wounded in Iraq, a Marine bravely rebuilds his life

Cpl. Mark P. O'Brien of East Aurora has overcome injury and depression to find a new life and new ways to help others damaged by war

By JERRY ZREMSKI
News Washington Bureau
5/29/2005


Derek Gee/Buffalo News
In a reunion tinged with sadness and triumph for everyone involved, Echo Company marches past Cpl. Mark P. O'Brien on his way to see his fellow marines from Golf Company during their March homecoming at Camp Pendleton, Calif.

Three days after losing two limbs to an enemy grenade, and minutes after handing his parents the note that said "I have no regrets," Marine Cpl. Mark P. O'Brien wrote another note.
"Don't cry," it said. "I'm going to learn from this. And I'm going to teach others."

Those words would come to define O'Brien's next six months and, he hopes, his next few decades.

Learning wasn't easy at first, to say nothing of teaching. Late last fall, O'Brien found himself in a wheelchair, facing long months of repetitive rehabilitation, and enduring overwhelming pain shooting through the missing arm and the leg.

While visiting his parents over the holidays, he broke down crying.

"The only thing I want for Christmas," he said, "is my arm and my leg."


[partial text only; follow link for full text]

Mentioned in this article:
Mark O'Brien

Friday, May 27, 2005

Severely injured troops relearn living skills
Submitted by: American Forces Press Service
Story Identification #: 20055269571
Story by - Rudi Williams



WASHINGTON (May 25, 2005) -- "It smells good in here already," a visitor to "Fort Independence" said as she walked into the kitchen where amputees sharpen their culinary skills at Walter Reed Army Medical Center here.

Fort Independence is a mock apartment set up in the hospital's occupational-therapy department to train newly disabled patients how to cook, get around an apartment safely, clean, and other skills they need to relearn to live alone after being discharged from the hospital.

What the visitor smelled was "my grandmother Fairbanks' pot roast recipe," said Capt. Jonathan Kuniholm, who lost part of his right arm on New Year's morning 2005 when an improvised explosive device exploded while he was on foot patrol in Haditha, Iraq.

Kuniholm said cooking classes for amputees is "a great idea."

"It's a good way to get people to test their skills or learn some new skills in preparing food," he said. "It's also a good way for all the patients to get to know each other a little bit better."

In Iraq, Kuniholm was assigned to Company C, 4th Combat Engineer Battalion, which is part of the 4th Marine Division.

While the aroma of Kuniholm's grandmother's pot roast permeated the kitchen, Army Sgt. Robert W. Blikle used his right hand to push a potato down on two nails to steady it on a chopping board. He used a vegetable peeler to peel one side, then turned it over, stuck it back on the nails, and peeled the other side.

Blikle was using only his right hand because an improvised explosive device blew off his left hand in Iraq in March, while he was serving with B Battery, 1st Battalion, 78th Field Artillery, South Carolina National Guard. He also suffered shrapnel wounds in his head above his eyes and on his right arm.

Blikle said taking cooking classes in Fort Independence "gives you a little taste of what you have to prepare for when you get back home."

Trish Autery watched silently as her son, Lance Cpl. Ryan A. Autery, 20, used his prosthetic hand to hold a piece of potato while he cut it with his other hand.

"Since I just got my (prosthetic) arm, I'm learning things slowly," Autery said. "I'm trying to integrate using my prosthetic arm, but cutting potatoes was kind of difficult because they were wet and slippery.

"This is a good thing because it teaches us how to be able to cook for ourselves if we live alone," he noted. "It's just another way of teaching how to work with one hand and one prosthetic hand."

"I think it's a wonderful idea because they need to be able to learn to do this stuff by themselves instead of just calling pizza delivery," Trish Autery said. "You've got to have some nourishing food every once in a while."

The three service members prepared pot roast, mashed potatoes and steamed broccoli. Normally four to seven patients attend cooking classes Fort Independence.

The kitchen is outfitted with a stove, microwave, dishwasher, washer and dryer, irons and ironing boards. The mock apartment is also outfitted with a bedroom, bathroom and living room with a television, computer and other amenities.

Kristi Say, an occupational therapist, said the biggest goals of Fort Independence are trying to increase the amputees' independence and safety. "This isn't really teaching them to cook, but more so retraining," she said.

She noted they also have to make a bed, do laundry, and fold clothes and towels. "In the bathroom, they have to show us that they can safely and independently get in and out of the bathtub, on and off the toilet," she continued.

Kitchen safety issues might include "things like instead of carrying something across the room, they might put it on a wheeled cart and push it across the room," Say said. "We also have brooms, dust pans, mops, and they have to totally clean up after they cook."

"We're using their prostheses with real-life tasks that they'll do when they leave here," said Army Capt. Jon Verdoni, who is in charge of the amputee section of the occupational therapy department. "It doesn't get more real than this."

Verdoni said the more cooking classes that are held, the better the meals get. "We had a student here about three weeks ago who was a professional chef on the outside," he said. "For his last week here he did smoked chicken enchiladas. It was awesome."

Verdoni said he and Say try to keep the classes structured, but it's not a regimented activity. "It's not like a military activity; we want the informalities, camaraderie and socialization, which is a goal in itself to get these guys socializing again in a proper manner," he said.

Mentioned:
Ryan Autrey
Robert Blikle

Monday, May 23, 2005

War injury inspires vet to help others

War injury inspires vet to help others
By RON MARTZ
Cox News Service
Monday, May 23, 2005


ATLANTA — After Army 1st Lt. Melissa Stockwell lost most of her left leg to a roadside bomb in Iraq last year, she decided the best way to deal with her injury was to help others deal with theirs.

Now medically retired from the Army, Stockwell is on her way to school in Minnesota to become a prosthetist, a job in which she will help recent amputees get a properly fitted prosthesis.

[partial text only; follow link for full article]

Mentioned:
Melissa Stockwell

Report in Nov 2004 shows 365 amputees

Trip Report
Department of Defense
Human Factors Engineering Technical Advisory Group (DOD HFE TAG) Meeting #52 – 01-04 November, 2004


The second speaker was Dr. Denise V. Gobert, Director of Research for the US Army Military Amputee Research Program, Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Dr. Gobert spoke on The US Army Amputee Patient Care Program: Optimizing Recovery After Traumatic Limb Loss. This program has as its goal the optimization of recovery following traumatic loss. In Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) and Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF), there have been 7,730 personnel wounded and 1,109 personnel lost. On the battlefield, one of the first things learned by the soldiers there is that “Kevlar saves lives.” Also, the medical care in theater is much better than in the past. But, if a soldier is wounded, he or she spends three to five days in Germany following air evacuation. In Germany a large medical team is made available, staffed with 18 different disciplines. Due to the different types of injuries being experienced today, innovative research is required to optimize care. Of the 365 amputees being tracked by the center, 88% are male, 75% are Army (followed by the US Marines). The average is 25 years (+/- 5.5 years) and 35 % of the injuries are to the upper extremity.

Extreme physical challenges are faced by amputees. The center’s view is to have a training plan, teach the amputee how to use what remains, manage pain and provide counseling. The ultimate goal is maximum independence through training, prostheses, self-care and leisure pursuit. The best technologies are being used today, including:
· Microprocessor-controlled knees
· Dynamic response (high energy return) prosthetic feet
· Speed sensor prosthetic hands (Otto back sensor hand)
· Myo-electric limb system
· Gait analysis and static digital capture
· Utah-3
· Vacuum-assisted sockets

Rehabilitation challenges fall into several areas:
· Materials: lighter, waterproof movable wrist (flex/extend). Currently, the control strings break too easily.
· Fit: Improved socket fit to fit contours and limbs better. Thinner materials. Socket design, trans-radial and wrist disarticulation.
· Function: Feedback mechanisms need individual digit motion, sensory feedback (temperature, pressure, etc.)
· Operability: range of motion, more natural function
· Reliability: Better power systems, increased reliability
· Control: myo-electric implants. Thought control.
· Durability: Silicon hands break down and tear too easily.
· Training: 3-D virtual reality programs for training, reaching, manipulating, feeding and military specific tasks.

In rehabilitation therapy, the goal is to get the amputee back to duty as soon as possible. So, there is emphasis placed on regaining the abilities to run, jump, climb, march and operate weapons. Clinical gait evaluation is used to help restore a natural gait. EMG is monitored to support training and learning how to take control of muscles. Heterotopic ossification occurs after injuries where bone grows randomly due to the disruption; this bone must be removed.

The amputee center conducts collaborative research with the Veterans Administration, US Army Telemedicine and Advance Technology Research Center, US Army Natick Soldier Center and USA Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine. They are exploring collaboration with DARPA on their exoskeleton system, microprocessor controlled limbs and implantable rice-size stimulators and sensors for pain control and sensing or amplification of muscle activity. They are working with the University of Utah on brain-machine interface. They are monitoring Sarcos Labs work on next-generation control systems for individual digit control.

A new $10B building for amputee training and research is planned at Walter Reed, with the opening planned in the fall of 2005.

Amputee Statistics from Army Medicine website

Numbers of amputees

These numbers represent persons treated in Army hospitals. They represent numbers of persons sustaining the loss of hands, feet, arms and/or legs; they do not include the loss of fingers and/or toes.

179 Army soldiers, 27 of whom are multiple amputees
55 Marines, 10 of whom are multiple amputees
4 Navy sailors, no multiple amputees
2 Air Force amputees, 1 of whom is a multiple amputee
Total of 240 service member amputees treated in Army hospitals

77 of these individuals have had upper extremity involvement (29%)

WRAMC has treated a total of 211 service members from OIF:

163 Army Soldiers, 22 of whom are multiple amputees
42 Marines, 7 of whom are multiple amputees
4 Navy sailors, no multiple amputees
2 Air Force airmen, 1 of whom is a multiple amputee
BAMC has treated a total of 38 service members from OIF:

28 Army Soldiers, 5 of whom are multiple amputees
9 Marines, 1 of whom is a multiple amputee
No Navy sailor amputees
1 Air Force airman, single-limb amputee
(Note: Some service members may have received treatment at both WRAMC and BAMC, so numbers from each individual facility may add up to more than the total number of amputees treated at all Army facilities.)

Labels:

Sunday, May 22, 2005

Vets Put a Positive Spin on Healing
A cross-country bicycle tour is raising money for military personnel injured in Iraq.

By David Pierson, Times Staff Writer


Army Staff Sgt. Heath Calhoun lost his legs in Iraq in a rocket-propelled grenade attack. But for the next 59 days, it's his arms that he is worried about.

Hunched down on his silver hand cycle, Calhoun embarked on an epic journey Saturday. He and two other cyclists, one of them also a veteran wounded in Iraq, are attempting to ride from Marina del Rey to Montauk Point, N.Y., to raise money for people injured in the war who, they say, often struggle when returning to civilian life.


"Everyone else uses their legs, but if one of my shoulders blows out, I'm out of the ride," said Calhoun, who pedals his 27-gear three-wheeler with his arms.



-Mentioned--

Heath Calhoun
Heath Calhoun

Wednesday, May 18, 2005

Great Attitude Carries Double Amputee Through Recovery

Great Attitude Carries Double Amputee Through Recovery
By Rudi Williams
American Forces Press Service


WASHINGTON, May 18, 2005 – If Kevin Pannell doesn't answer his cell phone, you'll get the message, "You've reached the coolest amputee in the world."

[follow link above for full article]

Friday, May 13, 2005

Famous Marine, Actor Encourages Wounded Troops

Famous Marine, Actor Encourages Wounded Troops
By Michael E. Dukes
Special to American Forces Press Service


WASHINGTON, May 13, 2005 – A man who probably is best known as the Marine drill instructor from the movie "Full Metal Jacket" and as host of the History Channel's "Mail Call" program visited recovering troops at Walter Reed Army Medical Center here May 12.

Marine Sgt. James King tells R. Lee Ermey, best known as the Marine drill instructor in the movie "Full Metal Jacket" that he plans to enter the Marine Corps Marathon and the New York Marathon after he recovers from the amputation of his left leg. Ermey met recovering war wounded at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington May 12 as part of a USO-sponsored visit. Photo by Michael E. Dukes (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available.

"I thought I'd come down and see how they're treating you down here," R. Lee Ermey told one of the patients he visited on the hospital's Ward 68.

A retired Marine gunnery sergeant, Ermey said he retired long ago, but he never left the Marine Corps. "I've been with the Marines for 44 years now," he said.

[follow link for full article]

--Mentioned--
James King

Raasch: Amputee G.I. gets a special treat from Bush and Cheney

Raasch: Amputee G.I. gets a special treat from Bush and Cheney

CHUCK RAASCH
Gannett News Service

The unfinished quilt was tucked in a bag in back of Army Sgt. Joseph Bozik's wheelchair. The cloth that meant the world to him, the cloth his mother had sent halfway around the world and back for him.
Bozik, who likes to be called Joey, lost both legs and his right arm when the Humvee he was in went over a land mine in the desert south of Baghdad in October.

Keeping busy amid the worry of a son in combat, Gail Bozik had enrolled in a quilting class near her home in Wilmington, N.C. The blanket she planned to commemorate his service to America suddenly had become a symbol of survival, recovery and ultimately, hope.

Raasch: Amputee G.I. gets a special treat from Bush and Cheney

Raasch: Amputee G.I. gets a special treat from Bush and Cheney

CHUCK RAASCH
Gannett News Service

The unfinished quilt was tucked in a bag in back of Army Sgt. Joseph Bozik's wheelchair. The cloth that meant the world to him, the cloth his mother had sent halfway around the world and back for him.
Bozik, who likes to be called Joey, lost both legs and his right arm when the Humvee he was in went over a land mine in the desert south of Baghdad in October.

Keeping busy amid the worry of a son in combat, Gail Bozik had enrolled in a quilting class near her home in Wilmington, N.C. The blanket she planned to commemorate his service to America suddenly had become a symbol of survival, recovery and ultimately, hope.

Injured Marine’s college loans are forgiven

May 13, 2005

Injured Marine’s college loans are forgiven

By Bevin Milavsky
The Daily Item

MIFFLINBURG — A Union County Marine who was injured by a roadside bomb in Iraq last year and had to have part of his left leg amputated has received loan forgiveness on the balance of student loans he accrued before going overseas.
State Sen. Jake Corman, R-34 of Bellefonte, along with officials from the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency and Citibank, presented a check to Lance Cpl. Jeffrey A. Sanders during a ceremony at Mifflinburg Area High School on Thursday morning.

[follow link for full article]

--Mentioned--
Jeffrey A. Sanders

Thursday, May 12, 2005

Truman award goes to local veteran

Truman award goes to local veteran


Sgt. Charles Bartles is greeted by Combined Arms Center and Fort Leavenworth Commander Lt. Gen. William S. Wallace before the 53rd annual Harry S. Truman Good Neighbor Award Foundation luncheon Friday in Kansas City, Mo. Bartles, an Army Reserve Soldier who lost his right arm in Iraq, was awarded the 2005 Philip Pistilli Silver Veteran's Medal at the event. Lamp photo by Prudence Siebert.
by Jeff Crawley, Staff Writer
Army Reserve Sgt. Chuck Bartles has always been a fighter. When he was 15 and 16, he was a nationally ranked Junior Olympics boxer. As a senior in high school at Yankton, S.D., he was the state American Boxing Federation champion.

A year and a half ago, when an improvised explosive device shattered his arm in Iraq, Bartles fought back from the injury.

Bartles was awarded the Harry S. Truman Good Neighbor Award Foundation's 2005 Philip Pistilli Silver Veteran's Medal Friday, in Kansas City, Mo. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor was also recognized at the ceremony.

[follow link for full text]

Mentinoed:
Chuck Bartles

To fly again

To fly again
Injured Army National Guard helicopter pilot holds fast to her dream


By Mary Ann Fergus
Tribune staff reporter
Published May 12, 2005


WASHINGTON -- Two weeks after a grenade blew off her legs and shattered her right arm, Army National Guard Maj. Tammy Duckworth set a goal: to fly again.

It is an ambitious dream; there have been only a handful of amputee pilots in military history. She says she knows of none with an injured right arm.

Perhaps the most famous is Douglas Bader, a World War II fighter pilot and double amputee with the Royal Air Force. Air Force Lt. Col. Andrew Lourake, who has visited Duckworth, returned to flight status last year after he lost a leg in a motorcycle accident.

[follow link for full article]

--Mentioned in this article--
Tammy Duckworth

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

Getting Amputees A New Lease On Life

Getting Amputees A New Lease On Life

Getting adjusted to life back home can be difficult for some of the service men and women returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan.

That's especially true for those who have lost a limb during the conflict.

But you're about see how medical technology, coupled with an unbridled desire to serve, is allowing many amputees to do something that was once considered impossible.

"I was hit with an RPG," Army Specialist Albert Ross said.

"One of the shrapnel cut my foot in half," Army E-5 Sergeant Moses Sonera said.

"It came through and took off my left leg," Petty Officer 3rd Class Robert Roeder said.

Of the service men and women serving in Iraq and Afghanistan, most will return home safe and sound. Some will not survive. For those somewhere in between, home often becomes the Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio.


[follow link for full text]

Mentioned in this article:
Moses Sonera
Robert Roeder
Albert Ross

Getting Amputees A New Lease On Life

05/10/05 - 9:35 pm
Getting Amputees A New Lease On Life

Getting adjusted to life back home can be difficult for some of the service men and women returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan.

That's especially true for those who have lost a limb during the conflict.

But you're about see how medical technology, coupled with an unbridled desire to serve, is allowing many amputees to do something that was once considered impossible.

"I was hit with an RPG," Army Specialist Albert Ross said.

"One of the shrapnel cut my foot in half," Army E-5 Sergeant Moses Sonera said.

[follow link for full text]

--Mentioned in this article--
Albert Ross
Moses Sonera
Robert Roeder

Tuesday, May 03, 2005

Unprecedented International Gathering Seeks Keys to Recovery for Survivors of War-Related Injuries
Tuesday May 3, 3:10 pm ET
Survivors from 37 Countries to Join Experts at May 9-10 Conference
American Servicewomen Amputees from Iraq War to Give Keynote Remarks


WASHINGTON, May 3 /PRNewswire/ -- At a time when amputation rates among U.S. troops in Iraq have almost doubled that of past wars, an unprecedented international conference will explore how to best assist the long-term recovery of victims of war-related injuries.
Approaches to Recovery and Reintegration of Survivors of War-Related Injuries, hosted by the Landmine Survivors Network (LSN) will be held May 9-10 at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Washington, D.C. For the first time ever, survivors from 37 countries will join those from the U.S. for panel discussions and breakout sessions with international leaders in research, prevention, trauma recovery and economic assistance programs for war-injured populations worldwide.

[follow link for full article]

Mentioned:
Melissa Stockwell
Tammy Duckworth
Andrea Lourake

Monday, May 02, 2005

U.S. military widening use of tourniquets

U.S. military widening use of tourniquets
Army, Marines to make tools standard equipment; Data indicates they save lives; 172,000 on way to Iraq, Afghanistan, maker says
Fighting without tourniquets

By Robert Little
Sun National Staff
Originally published May 2, 2005
As the Pentagon begins a hurried effort to distribute modern tourniquets to every soldier and Marine in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Army and the Marine Corps also have decided to make the simple medical tools standard equipment for more than 1 million service members throughout the world.

The move comes as new data from the two war zones show that modern tourniquets are saving lives in combat - and that soldiers without them have died, perhaps unnecessarily.

[follow link for full text]

War Amputees: Historic Stats

"It has been estimated that the number of amputations resulting from the First World War totaled 500,000 for all natinos engaged. Amputatinos among the armed forces of the United States were relatively small, however, numbering only about 4,000. During the Civil War there were well in excess of 30,000 amputations in the Union Army alone. Figures for the Second World War, released as of July 1, 1945, reveal that over 15,000 amputation cases have been treated in the various amputatino centers established by the Army and Navy of the United States, and no doubt there will be many more before the toll of the war is ended. Including all nations involved, the total number of amputations resulting from World War II will probably exceed a million."

Source: Thomas, Atha and Chester Haddan. Amputation Prosthesis. J. B. Lippincott Co. Philadelphia, PA. (1945).

Blinded and shattered After 34 surgeries, Marine maps out next part of his life

Blinded and shattered After 34 surgeries, Marine maps out next part of his life
Monday, May 02, 2005
By Ted Roelofs
Gazette News Service
Something told Marine Pfc. Dustin Howell he had to be there for the birth of his daughter. War could wait, if only for a day.

The 2003 Wayland High School graduate got to Mecosta County General Hospital in Big Rapids two hours after Amy Jo Howell was born. He held her in his arms the afternoon of Feb. 13, 2004, soaking up the sight of this miracle. Dark wet hair. Gray eyes.

After two hours with his newborn and his fiancee, Farenn Beaudin, he left for his base in California. The next day, he shipped out for the Sunni Triangle in Iraq.