Orlando Sentinel

Miami trauma surgeon traveled to Ukraine to help war victims

- By Anuraag Bukkuri Miami Herald

MIAMI — A woman whose arm and leg were shattered from minelike projectile­s shot into her apartment. A young man whose face was nearly blown away by a rocket-propelled grenade. A man whose chest and liver were obliterate­d from a missile strike.

These were among the cases that Dr. Enrique Ginzburg, trauma medical director at Jackson South Ryder Trauma Center, encountere­d on his recent trip to Ukraine, where he worked side by side with local physicians performing complex surgeries on victims of Russia’s invasion of the Eastern European country.

“It’s a very rewarding experience at this point in my life (...) to be able to contribute to such a humanitari­an mission,” says Ginzburg, also a professor of surgery at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.

In early April, Ginzburg traveled with a small team of trauma surgeons to the Lviv Clinical Emergency Hospital in western Ukraine to provide medical support and training for Ukrainian physicians.

Global Surgical and Medical Support Group (GSMSG) organized the mission; its purpose is to provide “humanitari­an services to conflict zones and austere settings,” says Dr. Aaron Epstein, president and founder of GSMSG, a Washington-based nonprofit.

Epstein, who had a background in defense, national security and intelligen­ce before becoming a physician, says he was inspired to start GSMSG when he was working in the Middle East and saw groups simply “come in and do their piece for a CNN photo shoot and leave or come in and provide really subpar medicine.”

But the GSMSG team wanted to do more: “I heard a lot of people talking (about Ukraine). And I wanted to do more,” said Ginzburg, 65, who met Epstein in 2016 when he was doing a rotation at Ryder Trauma during medical school at Georgetown University. Before working with Epstein and the GSMSG group in the Ukraine, Ginzburg worked with them in Iraq.

For Ginzburg, the connection to Ukraine is personal: His grandfathe­r is from Kyiv and his grandmothe­r is from eastern Poland.

Although Ginzburg has parachuted into difficult places such as Haiti and Iraq, he had never before operated in a war zone. The situation in Ukraine was particular­ly precarious since they were “operating in the context of theoretica­lly a first-world military that could be trying to destroy them,” rather than isolated attacks such as car bombs, suicide bombers or random attacks.

Three tough cases

After arriving in Ukraine, Ginzburg spent the next two days working alongside Ukrainian doctors, consulting with the physicians on the most complex patients.

One was the young woman whose arm and leg were shattered. The doctors considered covering the wound with a skin graft or flap, or even possible amputation. Ginzburg doesn’t know the outcome.

Another involved the young man whose face was destroyed by a rocket-propelled grenade, a case for which surgeons decided to follow a “staged approach,” entailing up to 20 operations to reconstruc­t the jaw and cover the face with muscle and skin.

Perhaps the most complex case was that of a patient whose chest and abdomen were ripped open from shrapnel from a missile strike. Physicians debated between operating immediatel­y, or draining fluid buildup with a catheter. The team decided to operate but were too late. The patient died just before they took him to the operating room.

Most of the patients were shipped in from hundreds of miles away, from eastern Ukraine, where the fighting has been the heaviest and where medical care is scarce as Russian forces have bombed hospitals and clinics.

However, as Epstein notes, simply donating supplies or performing a few medical procedures doesn’t affect the community in a lasting way. Instead, GSMSG focuses on “training host partners and communitie­s so they can gain the expertise and skills to use in their communitie­s going forward.”

Ryder trauma experience played big part

Due to Ginzburg’s three decades of treating trauma patients at Ryder, he was well-suited to work with the Ukrainian physicians, training them on treating patients with penetrativ­e and blunt trauma wounds.

At Ryder, Ginzburg has seen a lot, from patients with multiple gunshot wounds to devastatin­g

injuries caused by car accidents.

“He’s one of the most senior surgeons,” says Dr. Antonio Marttos Jr., a trauma surgeon at Ryder, who has known Ginzburg since he came to the Center in 2004 for a trauma and critical care fellowship. “He’s a world leader,” always making himself available for education and support and even putting his life on the line, as he did in Ukraine, Marttos added.

Ginzburg notes that although the extent of the injuries in Ukraine were greater and had some peculiarit­ies — he had never dealt with injuries caused by radioactiv­e projectile­s — cases at Ryder were similar to those on the Ukrainian battlefiel­d.

“With all the AR-15s that are being used in this country, they’re creating those type of wounds.” Ginzburg said.

Plans to return to Ukraine

Ginzburg’s work prompted members of the Ukrainian government, from the mayor of Lviv to the World Health Organizati­on’s regional director for Europe and Ukraine’s minister of health, to request additional surgeons and telemedici­ne initiative­s.

Since then, GSMSG has set up surgical teams, with groups of four surgeons visiting Ukraine every two weeks; the first of the teams is about to return home. GSMSG is also obtaining certificat­ions to establish multi-institutio­nal telemedici­ne efforts.

In the meantime, with the help of the Panamerica­n Trauma Society, a Virginia-based nonprofit, and the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine telemedici­ne efforts, Ginzburg and a team of surgeons have already completed two formal consultati­on calls and “are available for them (Ukrainian physicians) to present to us at anytime.”

Marttos, president of the Panamerica­n Trauma Society, says the

mission of the organizati­on was initially to “improve trauma and critical care throughout the Americas.”

But since the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic in March 2020, the group has expanded its reach globally, including to the recent Ukraine mission.

“You have a problem in Ukraine, somebody requests (help) and right away, within a matter of hours, you can connect everybody (...) and be able to discuss a case,” he said.

Ginzburg plans to return to Ukraine within the next several months.

Ginzburg was relatively unfazed while working in Ukraine, despite seeking refuge in safe houses when intelligen­ce reports warned them of several impending missile attacks. However, he recognizes the precarious­ness of the situation.

“Today, I was calling my life insurance because I have young sons and my wife, so I’m trying to make sure I have good coverage.”

His family is supportive of his missions but his wife, an occupation­al therapist who accompanie­d Ginzburg on his trips to Haiti, Iraq and Ukraine, insists he call her every day.

Yet while his family may worry, they know that his work is important.

Ginzburg is “one of the most intelligen­t and talented trauma surgeons that I’ve had the pleasure to work with,” Epstein said.

Added Marttos: “He’s someone that does not just stay on the ocean and follow the currents, going where the wind takes him. He’s a sailor. He knows where to go. He’s a leader.”

Ginzburg credits his love of adventure and helping others as the reason why he became a trauma surgeon.

“There’s nothing like getting someone who’s about to die and (...) being able to pull them from the jaws of death. There’s nothing more rewarding.”

 ?? COURTESY ?? Dr. Enrique Ginzburg, center, meets with local medical staff in Iraqi Kurdistan. Ginzburg, a senior trauma surgeon at Jackson Memorial in Miami, fears that incursions along the northern Syrian border could overwhelm northern Iraq with refugees.
COURTESY Dr. Enrique Ginzburg, center, meets with local medical staff in Iraqi Kurdistan. Ginzburg, a senior trauma surgeon at Jackson Memorial in Miami, fears that incursions along the northern Syrian border could overwhelm northern Iraq with refugees.

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