Medical and Hospital News
INTERN DAILY
Ukrainian child cancer patients face fragile recovery after Russian strike
Ukrainian child cancer patients face fragile recovery after Russian strike
By Barbara WOJAZER
Kyiv, Ukraine (AFP) July 12, 2024

Antonina Malyshko teared up when recounting the Russian missile strike that hit the Kyiv children's hospital where her six-month-old baby was being treated for cancer.

The missile hit as she was walking down the corridor to the shelter of Okhmatdyt hospital, where baby Martin has been since being diagnosed with liver cancer when he was two months old.

"I thought he would cry like other children but he just looks at me like that, sucking on the pacifier."

"He grabbed me tightly and that's it, I held him, and we were like that the whole time, he was calm," she said.

She was looking at Martin now peacefully sleeping, his pacifier falling off, while on blood transfusion at the clinic where he was moved after the strike.

A cruise missile on Monday slammed through Okhmatdyt's toxicology department and damaged large portions of the surrounding buildings of the clinic treating about 600 patients, provoking international condemnation.

It also upended the precarious path to recovery of children who, like Martin, were already facing a tough fight for their lives as they battle cancer.

"This child needs treatment. And not only this child: there are many children with different diseases. When attacks like these happen, you just don't understand how that will be possible," Malyshko, 33, said.

- 'No break' -

Photos of doctors in bloody robes and cancer patients being treated outside the bombed clinic triggered outrage.

Within an hour of the strike, the National Cancer Institute sent a team to take in some children and avoid the scariest scenario: an interruption of treatment.

The Institute's Director, Olena Yefimenko, said all the children in their care were in a stable condition.

"There was no break in treatment, they received therapy, even if it was suspended for just a few hours during the explosion, during this tragedy," she told AFP.

Two children who were in a serious condition before being transferred to other hospitals died, but it was unclear if their deaths were linked to the attack.

Yefimenko's hospital was busier than usual but she said it had quickly adapted to accommodate around 30 new patients.

"We've already been taught by the war," she said.

Among the transferred was 13-year-old Dmytro, suffering from sarcoma, who was with his mother Iryna Vyshnikina.

"If we hadn't come out, we wouldn't exist anymore," Dmytro said through his surgical mask.

While his mom spoke to AFP, Dmytro was on his phone scrolling through the DeepState interactive map that shows the operations of the Russian and Ukrainian army.

"It's okay, Dima, we came out and everything is fine," his mother reassured him.

While AFP was visiting the Cancer Institute, doctors learned that most of the patients would be moved back to Okhmatdyt in the coming days.

Vyshnikina was hoping to come back to the clinic where she and Dmytro had formed their "own kind of family" with other patients.

- 'Blood all over the stairs' -

Another mother, 24-year-old Maryna Shchomak, said she was shocked when she returned to the hospital the day after the strike.

"There was blood all over the stairs. It felt like such a dissonance. Everything was fine there before. You were used to the normal picture. And then you enter this chaos," Shchomak said.

The frenzy of the first days, when the hospital was full of volunteers helping to clear up the rubble, has subsided.

But it will take a huge effort to rebuild -- according to the Ministry of Health, the hospital needs 400 million hryvnias ($9.7 million) in equipment alone.

A few hundred people, including medical staff bearing bruises and cuts, gathered for a concert in memory of the victims under heavy heat on Friday.

The attack killed two adults, nephrologist Svitlana Lukyanchuk and a visitor.

Orthodox clerics began the ceremony with a prayer honouring the victims, whose photos stood on the ruins of the toxicology department.

The crowd then turned around to face the orchestra that had set up on a debris-covered slope, in front of shrapnel-ridden hospital blocks.

The orchestra was led by Herman Makarenko, who said the ensemble tried to convey the feeling of constant danger that had befallen Ukraine since Russia launched its full-scale invasion.

Back at the National Cancer Institute, Malyshko struggled to feel safe after seeing a missile fall on the children's hospital, which she had considered a safe haven.

"You don't know where and at what moment they can strike. You don't know what to expect and you can't even make out the logic of it all," she said.

Related Links
Hospital and Medical News at InternDaily.com

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
INTERN DAILY
People prefer using tweezer-like bionic tools over human-like prosthetics in virtual reality
London, UK (SPX) Jun 07, 2024
Researchers have used virtual reality to test whether humans can feel embodiment-the sense that something is part of one's body-toward prosthetic "hands that resemble a pair of tweezers. They report June 6 in the journal iScience that participants felt an equal degree of embodiment for the tweezer-hands and were also faster and more accurate in completing motor tasks in virtual reality than when they were equipped with a virtual human hand. "For our biology to merge seamlessly with tools, we need ... read more

INTERN DAILY
Nepal retrieves more bodies from buses swept away by landslide

27 dead, 15 missing as Indonesia ends landslide search

Nepal recovers first body from buses swept away by landslide

200 more Kenyan police deploy to tackle Haiti violence

INTERN DAILY
NextNav Receives DOT Award to Enhance PNT Services as GPS Backup

Lebanon says Israeli GPS jamming confounding ground, air traffic

Green light for Galileo 2nd Generation satellite design

Europe's Largest Ground Segment Upgraded Without User Disruption

INTERN DAILY
Chinese kindergartens pivot to senior care as population ages

UN says world population to peak at 10.3 billion in the 2080s

Lucy while barely a metre tall still towers over our understanding of human origins

Murdered and forgotten: Iraqi victims of gender-based violence

INTERN DAILY
Romania to cull nearly 500 bears after hiker killed

UN biodiversity summit in Colombia 'will fail,' guerrilla group threatens

Cuba a haven for the world's tiniest bird; EU court rules against wolf hunting

Canada conservationists push back as grizzly hunting ban lifted

INTERN DAILY
Decade since Ebola, Sierra Leone fights another deadly fever

Decade since Ebola, Sierra Leone fights another deadly fever

Togo tightens Covid controls after hajj deaths

E.coli warning before UK's Henley regatta

INTERN DAILY
China props up Solomon Islands' budget with $20 mn injection

China making youth unemployment a 'top priority'

Top Myanmar general in China for official visit: junta

Bass beats bring Shanghai's deaf and hearing clubbers together

INTERN DAILY
Guns n' ganja: Weapons flood Catalonia's cannabis trade

Spain, France bust million-euro-a-day money laundering network

China cracks down on money-changing syndicates in Macau

Italy says seizes six tonnes of drug 'precursors' from China

INTERN DAILY
Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.