1. Home
  2. News & stories
  3. In transit for survival: MSF ambulances and Ukraine's war-wounded

In transit for survival: MSF ambulances and Ukraine's war-wounded

02 Sep 24 | 03 Sep 24

In transit for survival: MSF ambulances and Ukraine's war-wounded

2 September 2024

Diana Bilonozhko helps a patient sit in the ambulance after a dialysis procedure. Caption
Diana Bilonozhko helps a patient sit in the ambulance after a dialysis procedure.

An update from the Donetsk region in Ukraine, where MSF's ambulances have been providing patients with access to hospitals outside of the conflict zone.

A severely injured 45-year-old man injured in shelling, suffering from burns to 90 percent of his body, including his internal organs, waits for medical evacuation from a frontline hospital in the Donetsk region. A Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) ambulance is transporting him to Dnipro, a medical hub where patients from the most dangerous regions receive treatment.

“MSF ambulances frequently transfer patients from frontline hospitals after surgery and initial medcal care, but there are no guarantees that nothing will happen to them during transportation. Bleeding may occur, and a patient’s condition can rapidly deteriorate from stable to unstable. We carry the necessary medications to stabilise patients in such cases, or to apply a tourniquet and administer a haemostatic drug if needed,” explains MSF paramedic Dmytro Bilous, who has been working near the frontline with the MSF ambulance team.

A man, 45 years old, with burns over 90% of his body and upper respiratory tract, is being prepared and evacuated from the Druzhkivka hospital, a frontline city in the Donetsk region. MSF ambulance transports a patient to Dnipro.  Caption
A man, 45 years old, with burns over 90% of his body and upper respiratory tract, is being prepared and evacuated from the Druzhkivka hospital, a frontline city in the Donetsk region. MSF ambulance transports a patient to Dnipro.

Burns and other war-related injuries—head trauma, injuries to the trunk and limbs, soft tissue damage, and massive haemorrhages—account for over 60% of the cases our doctors encounter when transporting patients in MSF ambulances. As of 31 July 2024, the MSF ambulance team had completed 8,000 patient referrals, with 15 percent of these patients requiring transportation in intensive care unit (ICU) ambulances. More than half of these injuries were directly caused by the ongoing full-scale war.

Donate to our General Fund

Help provide vital medical care to those who need it most.

Donate to our General Fund

MSF medical teams have observed that medical facilities located 20-30 kilometres from the conflict areas in eastern and southern Ukraine are either completely destroyed due to relentless shelling over the past two years, or partially damaged. Those that remain functional face a critical shortage of medical personnel. Since the full-scale invasion began in February 2022, many specialists have fled to safer cities or abroad. Hospitals also suffer from a shortage of beds, as they are inundated not only with war-wounded patients but also with those suffering from chronic illnesses, heart attacks, strokes, and car accident injuries. MSF supports these hospitals by alleviating their burden. The need for medical transportation by ambulance becomes especially acute during heavy missile attacks, when hospitals are overwhelmed by mass casualties.

One of the MSF ambulance bases is currently located in a children's hospital in the city of Sloviansk, Donetsk region. Several hospital wards were allocated to the medical teams to use when they are on duty and waiting for calls for patients' evacuation. Caption
One of the MSF ambulance bases is currently located in a children's hospital in the city of Sloviansk, Donetsk region. Several hospital wards were allocated to the medical teams to use when they are on duty and waiting for calls for patients' evacuation.

“As a result of an attack in Kostiantynivka, Donetsk region, on 9 August, 14 people were killed, and over 40 were injured. A supermarket and a post office in the city centre, where many civilians were present, were hit. There were dozens of wounded. MSF doctors assisted with wound care and suturing, and we also transported two severely injured patients to Dnipro using MSF ambulances. With a constant influx of trauma patients needing referrals, MSF ambulance teams ensure that patients are transferred to hospitals where they can receive the specialised care they require,” says Christopher Stokes, MSF emergency coordinator in Ukraine.

This situation highlights the unpredictability of how many intensive care or surgical beds will be needed in any given hospital tomorrow. Shelling can occur at any moment, and our teams operate in a state of constant emergency. There have been cases where war-wounded patients had to be evacuated under fire, yet the medics continue to fulfil their duty.

A man, 45 years old, with burns over 90% of his body and upper respiratory tract, is being prepared and evacuated from the Druzhkivka hospital, a frontline city in the Donetsk region. MSF ambulance transports a patient to Dnipro.  

The condition is difficult, with severe facial burns. It is difficult for the patient to speak. Explosions can be heard near the hospital; it is artillery salvos. The front line from Druzhkivka is 39 km.  

"At the stages of evacuation, the patient was helped - morphine and strophanthin solution were administered, but the pain still remains, according to the patient. Now, at our stage, a tramadol solution and a drip were added for the volume of circulating blood that was spent on decompensating the burns. And I will conduct follow-up during the route and provide medicines as needed. 
Burn patients are transported all the time because it happens all the time on the frontlines. This is about 70% compared to other injuries," says Andrii Velykyi, MSF feldsher. Caption
A man, 45 years old, with burns over 90% of his body and upper respiratory tract, is being prepared and evacuated from the Druzhkivka hospital, a frontline city in the Donetsk region. MSF ambulance transports a patient to Dnipro. The condition is difficult, with severe facial burns. It is difficult for the patient to speak. Explosions can be heard near the hospital; it is artillery salvos. The front line from Druzhkivka is 39 km. "At the stages of evacuation, the patient was helped - morphine and strophanthin solution were administered, but the pain still remains, according to the patient. Now, at our stage, a tramadol solution and a drip were added for the volume of circulating blood that was spent on decompensating the burns. And I will conduct follow-up during the route and provide medicines as needed. Burn patients are transported all the time because it happens all the time on the frontlines. This is about 70% compared to other injuries," says Andrii Velykyi, MSF feldsher.

“I have a child. He gets upset when I leave, asking, ‘You’re coming back, right?’ I always tell him, ‘Yes, of course, I will come back.’ I have to work so that he grows up without witnessing all of this,” shares MSF paramedic Dmytro Bilous.
 

MSF ambulances began conducting medical referrals in Ukraine in April 2022. Today, the fleet consists of 17 vehicles, supported by 36 paramedics, 8 doctors, and 26 drivers, all of whom work tirelessly to ensure proper care. Additionally, logisticians, pharmacists, and coordinators ensure the effective operation of the project.

An ambulance evacuates a patient in critical condition from Druzhkivka, Donetsk region to the hospital in Dnipro, Dnipropetrovsk region. Caption
An ambulance evacuates a patient in critical condition from Druzhkivka, Donetsk region to the hospital in Dnipro, Dnipropetrovsk region.

MSF paramedic Dmytro Bilous mentions that they often ask civilians why they continue to live near the frontline despite the danger. The most common response is: “We just didn’t have time to evacuate.” According to journalists’ estimates, approximately one million people in Ukraine continue to live close to the conflict areas. They cling to the homes they’ve built over their lifetimes, to familiar streets, gardens, flowers, and trees that, despite the war, still bear fruit. These people hold on to the hope for peace.

MSF and the War in Ukraine

· The war in Ukraine, ongoing since 2014, escalated significantly in 2022, with intense fighting in the east, southeast, and northeast.


· Civilian casualties and significant damage to medical infrastructure, particularly in Donetsk, Kharkiv, and Kherson regions.


· MSF operates 17 ambulances near the frontline, including five ICU vehicles and three multi-patient transport vehicles.


· Ambulances are strategically based in Dnipropetrovsk, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk, Kharkiv, Kherson, and other regions, covering the whole of Ukraine as per Ministry of Health requests.


· In 2024, patient transport increased by 30% compared to late 2023, with over 8,000 patients transported in the last six months.


· Ambulances cover up to 120,000 km monthly, with 40% of cases being non-traumatic and 60% war-related injuries.


· Among those transported, 136 were children, 38 of whom required ICU care. The youngest patient was three days old, and the oldest was 98.


· MSF first worked in Ukraine in 1999.