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More than 500 intensivists
trained to use point-of-care ultrasound
More than 50 point-of-care
ultrasound workshops conducted
More than 400 mental health
consultations conducted

By

katya
Over the past year, he has helped heal over 600 people who were suffering from PTSD caused by the war. Mothers who last saw their sons in shackles on Russian TV. Daughters who can only picture their dads in their memories and photographs. According to the Ukraine Ministry of Health, Ukraine is expected to have...
Ukrainian kids should be dreaming about new gadgets and playing active games outside. Instead, they think of war and can tell artillery fire from mortar rounds by the sound. More than 40% of Ukrainian children have left their homes because of the war. Together with Nina Havelia, an NLP Trainer, we provide therapy for Ukranian...
Over the past few months, he’s helped deliver several modern ambulances from Belgium to Ukraine, organized several thousand hot meals for Ukrainian healthcare professionals, and provided Ukrainian hospitals with vacuum therapy machines and portable ultrasound devices. Steven’s wife, Julia, is from Dnipro. That’s why Ukraine holds a special place in the pilot’s heart. From the...
This is the second time Help Ukrainian Hospitals has supported Rom Stevens coming from Chicago to Ukraine. Rom is coming to run a training program called Point of Care Ultrasonography (POCUS) for students, teachers, interns, and doctors from the entire Dnipropetrovsk region. In March, Rom is bringing a team of doctors from the best medical...
Help Ukrainian Hospitals, Inc organized 2 visits to Ukraine by Professor Rom Stevens from Chicago to teach 400+ anesthesiologists from Dnipro and the region to make decisions at the point of care. Portable ultrasound devices can see the problem on the spot and help to guide doctors for immediate intervention. This may significantly alter survival...
Official statistics states that 90% of Vietnam War veterans got divorced, 60% went to prison, and every third committed suicide. And that’s even with the government providing medical, social, and mental support. Unfortunately, there are very few reintegration and rehabilitation centers for military veterans in Ukraine. And we’ll soon be hit hard with a massive...
There’s a comic book for Ukrainian children titled “Daddy Returned from the War”. The book teaches kids not to approach their fathers from behind, not to frighten them, and not to be afraid when they scream at night and explains that getting better takes some time and is normal. Even 20 years after a war,...
This is Artem Horpynych, a restaurateur from Dnipro and a dear friend of ours. His Nagori team makes 1,000 meals monthly to feed the health care professionals of Dnipro City Hospital No. 16. Because of the huge influx of wounded soldiers and civilians, doctors work 24/7, leaving them with very few breaks and no days...
The patient is losing blood, and the lights suddenly start to flicker in the hospital. A child lies on the operating table, and the doctors are working using a flashlight. Oncology patients are trying to reach the hospital under explosions. This is the reality of life in Ukraine. In the occupied territories, doctors work without...
Can a minute save a soldier’s life? Yes, if the doctor can get a defibrillator timely. But what if there’s a queue to use a defibrillator? What if there’s only one defibrillator for the entire hospital? What if the soldier was brought in on the floor of an ill-equipped bus instead of a well-equipped ambulance?...
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