Sergio Pistoi, Science Writer and Consultant

Science Communication, Journalism and Strategic Planning in Research

Extreme Medicine: a Profile of Gino Strada

By admin • Dec 31st, 2001 • Category: Selected articles

Gino Strada

Scientific American, January 13, 2002

In a hospital northeast of Kabul, surgeon Gino Strada is redefining what it means to provide quality medical care in a combat zone.

By Sergio Pistoi and  Marco Cattaneo

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Link to Scientific American Website

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In late OCTOBER three Katyusha rockets, launched by the Taliban in retaliation for U.S. air strikes, hit the market of the small city of Charikar in territory controlled by the opposition Northern Alliance. Two people die in the attack, and another 25 are injured. The injured, all civilians, among them many women and children, are rushed along a bumpy road to Anabah, in the deep gorge of the Panjshir Valley. There, 60 kilometers from Kabul, is the only hospital in all of northern Afghanistan equipped with the accoutrements of modern medicine: an emergency room, a radiology suite, two fully outfitted operating theaters with a supply of oxygen, a clinical laboratory, sterilizers, a blood bank, an intensive care unit, and four surgical wards and beds for 70 patients.

In a country with scant electricity, phone service and running water, the hospital’s neat, one-story white building appears almost as a mirage against the impressive backdrop of the Hindu Kush mountain range. On the side of the hospital are painted the three red stripes that represent the logo of the international aid organization Emergency, a nongovernmental agency headquartered in Milan, Italy.

The little hospital in Anabah does not go ignored by the rest of the world. A few hours later the figure of a rugged, slightly disheveled hulk of a man appears on Italian television. Gino Strada, the gray-bearded, 53-year-old chief surgeon at the Anabah hospital and the co-founder of Emergency, sorts the injured in preparation for their entry into the operating room. Strada has gained celebrity both in Afghanistan and in his native Italy, where he has been described as a leggenda vivente by the Turin daily newspaper La Stampa….. READ FULL TEXT (Pdf)

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