29 July 2009

Landstuhl hospital receives more casualties from Afghanistan than Iraq in July

From left to right, Navy Capt. (Dr.) Eric Pagenkopf, Dr. Michael Weingarten and Dr. Peter Trafton operate Wednesday at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center on the legs of a soldier wounded earlier this month in an improvised bomb explosion in Afghanistan. Photo: Chuck Roberts/Landstuhl Regional Medical Center.


Full story here.

Landstuhl sees more casualties from Afghanistan than Iraq
By Steve Mraz, Stars and Stripes
Online edition, Wednesday, July 29, 2009

LANDSTUHL, Germany — The number of combat-wounded troops from Afghanistan treated at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in July has far surpassed the number of wounded from Iraq this month, a result of the United States’ renewed combat efforts in Afghanistan and the recent restrictions placed on U.S. troops in Iraq.

Landstuhl has seen 105 U.S. troops with battle injuries from Afghanistan so far in July while the hospital has treated just 14 battle-injured U.S. troops from Iraq, even though the number of U.S. servicemembers in Iraq (130,000) far exceeds the number in Afghanistan (58,000).

The hospital is the first stop for U.S. wounded troops from the war zones.

The uptick in wounded from Afghanistan coincides with the record-high 39 U.S. troops killed so far this month in the country.

...

The number of combat-wounded from Afghanistan is the highest of any month since the war began in 2001, statistics show. It’s also only the second time there have been more casualties in Afghanistan than in Iraq: From mid-May to October 2008, Landstuhl received slightly more battle-injured troops from Afghanistan, according to hospital records.

In previous years, as much as 80 to 90 percent of the battle-injured troops at Landstuhl came from Iraq, said Air Force Lt. Col. (Dr.) Raymond Fang, Landstuhl’s trauma director.

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In Iraq, operations have slowed. U.S. troops completed their withdrawal from Iraqi cities at the end of June as part of the long-term security agreement struck last year between the two countries, and the number of casualties immediately fell. From June 29 to July 6, Landstuhl saw a seven-day stretch during which it received no combat-injured servicemembers from Iraq — the third-longest such span for the hospital in the last six years, hospital officials said.

Landstuhl’s doctors expect to continue seeing more wounded from Afghanistan, especially as troop levels there approach 68,000 later this year.

“Their mission is to go in and root out the Taliban, so I would expect there will be engagements and casualties,” Fang said.

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