"When one doctor tells you that it's better to cut off your hand, it's better to ask another," Dmytro Sukhodolskyi shares his experience. He had 18 bullet wounds and has been undergoing treatment for over 500 days. Now the man is waiting for another operation.
What does a seriously injured person face after being injured? What made Dmytro unpleasantly impressed in the military hospitals in Ukraine? How did he get to Poland for treatment and what are the features there? How did he become a participant in the "Save a Limb" program and what did it give him?
And also on rehabilitation centers, cheap endoprostheses, the work of the Ministry of Veterans Affairs, foster care services and the experience of returning to normal life.
Watch and listen to the "++ podcast" - a conversation between serviceman Serhii Hnezdilov and veteran, ambassador of the "Save a Limb" program, Dmytro Sukhodolskyi.
00:00 presentation of the guest
02:09 on how it all began in 2014
04:44 the moment of the injury, what preceded it
09:03 "at one of the turns we were met by the recon"
10:19 "I see that I am bleeding"
11:04 "I see that the car is already on fire and the driver is gone"
13:03 18 bullet wounds: "When they did the hospital commision to me, they counted 32-33 scars"
13:19 "the first operation takes 12 hours, and the total operations are over 20"
13:47 "I was still very lucky - they put on harnesses, everything else, and it took 30 minutes to drive on an essentially flat track."
14:46 "the seriously wounded were kept in the corridors"
15:29 "I realized that they were not providing the help I wanted"
15:42 "if they said right away that you wouldn't be able to see, I might have accepted it calmly"
16:16 "as for the eye, I'm not losing hope... or I'll be the Terminator"
16:57 "what do you want, you have a second eye"
17:50 "they didn't know what to do next with the hand, because it took a lot of bullets"
17:58 "probably this hand saved my life"
19:23 "first they found an infection, we have this problem in military hospitals because they don't have time to treat wounds"
20:42 on treatment in Warsaw
21:36 "I was just being lifted by 3-4 men in a wheelchair"
23:06 can we say that after being wounded, a soldier starts another war
23:47 "thank you for your service, get well now"
24:45 "our state is not designed for this, to call you and ask if you want to help, you have to do it yourself"
26:11 "in the hospital they said: "Wait three months, the leg will recover on its own", but it started to hurt like hell"
27:03 on the "Health of the Ukrainian People" fund and the national program "Save a limb"
29:26 "since the beginning of the injury, the treatment has been going on for over a year and a half"
29:42 about the problems of rehabilitation
31:04 about communication from the Ministry of Veterans Affairs
32:30 "where is the information for the guy about his nearest rehabilitation center?"
33:50 about the Patronage Service of the 3rd Assault Brigade
34:43 about the fact that wounded soldiers, especially in small towns and villages, do not know where to look for help and support
36:41 about the path of a soldier after being wounded
37:42 "when one doctor tells you that it is better to cut off your hand, it is better to ask another"
38:15 "I used to be able to do only this, reach to my nose"
38:40 "the doctor said: "You are too young for arthroplasty, but we will do a bone graft for you""
39:11 "we buy the cheapest endoprostheses designed for cancer patients"
39:53 about the work of the Ministry of Veterans Affairs
42:50 about the national program "Save a limb": "It's cool when you have options"
Негізгі бет "I wasn't getting the help I wanted." Dmytro Sukhodolskyi, Serhii Hnezdilov / ++ podcast
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