Penetrating missile injuries during asymmetric warfare in the 2003 Gulf conflict
- PMID: 15744703
- DOI: 10.1002/bjs.4911
Penetrating missile injuries during asymmetric warfare in the 2003 Gulf conflict
Abstract
Background: War wounds produce a significant burden on medical facilities in wartime. Workload from the recent conflict was documented in order to guide future medical needs.
Methods: All data on war injuries were collected prospectively. This information was supplemented with a review of all patients admitted during the study period.
Results: During the first 2 weeks of the conflict, the sole British field hospital in the region received 482 casualties. One hundred and four were battle injuries of which nine were burns. Seventy-nine casualties had their initial surgery performed by British military surgeons and form the study group. Twenty-nine casualties (37 per cent) sustained gunshot wounds, 49 (62 per cent) suffered wounds from fragmentation weapons and one casualty detonated an antipersonnel mine. These 79 patients had a total of 123 wounds that were scored prospectively using the Red Cross Wound Classification. Twenty-seven (34 per cent) of the wounded were non-combatants; eight of these were children. Four patients (5 per cent) died.
Conclusion: War is changing; modern conflicts appear likely to be fought in urban or remote environments, producing different wounding patterns and placing non-combatants in the line of fire. Military medical skills training and available resources must reflect these fundamental changes in preparation for future conflicts.
Comment in
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Penetrating missile injuries during asymmetric warfare in the 2003 Gulf conflict (Br J Surg 2004; 92: 637-642).Br J Surg. 2005 Aug;92(8):1047-8. doi: 10.1002/bjs.5132. Br J Surg. 2005. PMID: 16034835 No abstract available.
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