Background: Afghanistan has been plagued by war for more than 30 years, but little is known about the civilian cost of such a long-lasting conflict. In particular, the incidence of war injuries among civilians has largely been under-reported. EMERGENCY NGO’s Surgical Centre for War Victims has been operating in Kabul since 2001, providing care free of charge to anyone injured in war. The primary aim of our study is to describe the population of patients admitted to our hospital in Kabul. Methods: This is a 5-year retrospective analysis of all recorded hospital admissions at EMERGENCY NGO’s hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan, from 1 January 2017 to 31 December 2021. Results: During the study period, 16,053 patients were admitted. Of these, 85.7% were male and 17.5% were under 14 years old. The proportion of male patients increased progressively with the age ranges (from 63.4 to 89.0%). Bullet wounds were the most frequent kind of injury (55.6%), followed by shell, stab and mine wounds (32.2%, 8.3% and 3.9% respectively). Only 5.8% of patients arrived at our hospital within the “golden hour” following injury. No significant reduction in the hospitalization trend was observed over the study period. The overall in-hospital mortality rate was 4.41%, which bore no correlation to the number of admissions. Conclusions: This study provides for the first time epidemiology of war-related injuries in a hospital located in a place of long-standing conflict.

Civilian war victims in Afghanistan: five-year report from the Kabul EMERGENCY NGO hospital

Baiardo Redaelli M.
2023-01-01

Abstract

Background: Afghanistan has been plagued by war for more than 30 years, but little is known about the civilian cost of such a long-lasting conflict. In particular, the incidence of war injuries among civilians has largely been under-reported. EMERGENCY NGO’s Surgical Centre for War Victims has been operating in Kabul since 2001, providing care free of charge to anyone injured in war. The primary aim of our study is to describe the population of patients admitted to our hospital in Kabul. Methods: This is a 5-year retrospective analysis of all recorded hospital admissions at EMERGENCY NGO’s hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan, from 1 January 2017 to 31 December 2021. Results: During the study period, 16,053 patients were admitted. Of these, 85.7% were male and 17.5% were under 14 years old. The proportion of male patients increased progressively with the age ranges (from 63.4 to 89.0%). Bullet wounds were the most frequent kind of injury (55.6%), followed by shell, stab and mine wounds (32.2%, 8.3% and 3.9% respectively). Only 5.8% of patients arrived at our hospital within the “golden hour” following injury. No significant reduction in the hospitalization trend was observed over the study period. The overall in-hospital mortality rate was 4.41%, which bore no correlation to the number of admissions. Conclusions: This study provides for the first time epidemiology of war-related injuries in a hospital located in a place of long-standing conflict.
2023
2022
EMERGENCY; Low-income country; Mortality; Surgery; Trauma; War; War injuries; War wounds
Spagnolello, O.; Gatti, S.; Shahir, M. A. A.; Afzali, M. F.; Portella, G.; Baiardo Redaelli, M.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11383/2186718
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