Despite the more than two years of war in Ukraine, and a recent escalation in summer 2024 in the Donetsk region, many civilians continue to live in settlements near the front lines, where there are often shortages of specialized medical professionals. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is working to conduct medical evacuations to ensure that patients receive appropriate care away from the hostilities.
“It’s insufferable. Everything hurts. It’s hard to breathe; it burns everywhere,” whispers a 45-year-old man, barely moving his lips, as he wait for medical evacuation from a front-line hospital in the Donetsk region.
After suffering burns to 90% of his body in a shelling, he requires specialized medical care, which is often only available in hospitals far from the conflict areas. An MSF ambulance is transporting him to Dnipro, a medical hub where patients from the most dangerous regions receive treatment.
“MSF ambulances frequently transfer patients from front-line hospitals after surgery and initial medical care, but there are no guarantees that nothing will happen to them during transportation. Bleeding may occur, and a patient’s condition can rapidly deteriorate from stable to unstable. We carry the necessary medications to stabilize patients in such cases, or to apply a tourniquet and administer a hemostatic drug if needed,” explains MSF paramedic Dmytro Bilous, who has been working near the front line with the MSF ambulance team.