The New Zealand Herald

How Skripals were saved

Doctors admit they believed ex-spy and daughter would die

- William Booth in London Newsnight — Washington Post

It has been one of the great mysteries of the poison attack on a former Russian spy and his daughter in England: How did the two survive the Soviet-era nerve agent Novichok, thought to be one of the most deadly chemical weapons ever created? Now there is an answer, at least in part.

It was fast, decisive action by British medics and physicians — aided by police investigat­ors and government experts in nerve agents — who quickly diagnosed the threat.

Still, the medical team thought the pair would not make it.

On the afternoon of March 4, first responders had no idea what they were dealing with. Finding Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, slumped on a park bench in the town of Salisbury, medics suspected an opioid overdose.

Yulia, 33, appeared unconsciou­s, witnesses said. Sergei, 66, was staring into space. Later, investigat­ors said they believed the Skripals were poisoned with Novichok, probably at their front door.

Lorna Wilkinson, the nursing director at Salisbury District Hospital, told the BBC that the first clue that it was not a drug overdose was when Sergeant Nick Bailey, a police officer and first responder, was admitted to the emergency room with similar symptoms. “There was a real concern as to how big this could get,” Wilkinson said.

The hospital and police did not know whether this was a targeted attack or a broader, indiscrimi­nate accident — or even a terrorist attack, with an unknown poison.

Wilkinson and the medical team at the hospital spoke with BBC’s

in detail about the case. Another clue in those early hours was when police learned that the elder Skripal was a former Russian spy and double agent living in retirement, openly, under his own name in Salisbury.

The medical team realised that the pair were exhibiting symptoms typical of organophos­phate poisoning — the substance used in pesticides and in nerve agents. Victims of organophos­phate or nerve-agent poisoning can present with pinpointsi­ze pupils, vomiting, drooling and tears, followed by muscle spasms, seizures and cardiac arrest.

“When we first were aware this was a nerve agent, we were expecting them not to survive,” Stephen Jukes, an intensive-care con- sultant at the hospital, told the BBC.

“We would try all our therapies,” he said. “We would ensure the best clinical care. But all the evidence was there that they would not survive.”

The physicians consulted experts at nearby Porton Down, the British government laboratory that researches chemicals weapons, their detection and antidotes.

The doctors told the BBC that the Skripals were heavily sedated, to receive artificial ventilatio­n and to protect them from brain damage.

The medical team sought to boost the pair’s production of acetylchol­inesterase, an enzyme that is vital for the brain to communicat­e with muscles and can be blocked by nerve agents.

Yulia Skripal recovered more quickly than did her father. She was released from the hospital last month and is living in a “secure environmen­t” under the protection of British police.

In a statement and a later interview with Reuters, Yulia Skripal said, “After 20 days in a coma, I woke to the news that we had both been poisoned.”

During their “slow and extremely painful” recovery, she said, she has been struggling to come to terms with “the devastatin­g changes thrust upon me both physically and emotionall­y”.

“I don’t want to describe the details, but the clinical treatment was invasive, painful and depressing,” she said.

“In the longer term, I hope to return home to my country” once she and her father have recovered, she added.

Sergei Skripal left the hospital two weeks ago.

He has not given any statements and is also living under British Government protection in an undisclose­d location.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Yulia Skripal says she has been struggling to come to terms with “the devastatin­g changes thrust upon me”.
Photo / AP Yulia Skripal says she has been struggling to come to terms with “the devastatin­g changes thrust upon me”.

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