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“No Shit There I Was in Baghdad…”

“No Shit There I Was in Baghdad…” LWW/AENJ LWWJ351-10 August 8, 2007 0:50 Char Count= 0 Advanced Emergency Nursing Journal Vol. 29, No. 3, pp. 265–283 Copyright c 2007 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Personal Stories and Lessons Learned in a Combat Support Hospital in Baghdad LTC John Groves, RN, BSN, MSN, CEN Editor’s Note: The selections that follow are a col- constant concern about what we would face lection of impressions and memories from Army in terms of traumatic injuries. The Ibn Sina nurses, physicians, and medics deployed to Iraq in hospital, formerly the Bathist hospital, was 2005–2006. Many were written while the contrib- well known not only through the Army Med- utors were still deployed in Baghdad and, as such, ical Department, but throughout the world, represent very personal and real-time reflections as one of the busiest trauma centers in the on war-time trauma care, the intensity of which world. A veteran of Baghdad told me, “It will most of us will never experience. These are touch- be the best and worst time of your life.” She ing and, in some cases, difficult stories to read; all was right. The following is a compilation of the more reason we need to http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Advanced Emergency Nursing Journal Wolters Kluwer Health

“No Shit There I Was in Baghdad…”

Advanced Emergency Nursing Journal , Volume 29 (3) – Jul 1, 2007

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Copyright
© 2007 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
ISSN
1931-4485
eISSN
1931-4493
DOI
10.1097/01.TME.0000286974.99232.29
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

LWW/AENJ LWWJ351-10 August 8, 2007 0:50 Char Count= 0 Advanced Emergency Nursing Journal Vol. 29, No. 3, pp. 265–283 Copyright c 2007 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Personal Stories and Lessons Learned in a Combat Support Hospital in Baghdad LTC John Groves, RN, BSN, MSN, CEN Editor’s Note: The selections that follow are a col- constant concern about what we would face lection of impressions and memories from Army in terms of traumatic injuries. The Ibn Sina nurses, physicians, and medics deployed to Iraq in hospital, formerly the Bathist hospital, was 2005–2006. Many were written while the contrib- well known not only through the Army Med- utors were still deployed in Baghdad and, as such, ical Department, but throughout the world, represent very personal and real-time reflections as one of the busiest trauma centers in the on war-time trauma care, the intensity of which world. A veteran of Baghdad told me, “It will most of us will never experience. These are touch- be the best and worst time of your life.” She ing and, in some cases, difficult stories to read; all was right. The following is a compilation of the more reason we need to

Journal

Advanced Emergency Nursing JournalWolters Kluwer Health

Published: Jul 1, 2007

There are no references for this article.