These firefighters from Canada are helping emergency responders in Ukraine save lives
CBC
A group of Edmonton firefighters is back home after providing combat first aid training to emergency responders in Ukraine.
The team from Firefighter Aid Ukraine, an Edmonton organization that has been distributing PPE and other equipment in Ukraine for years, visited Kolomyia in western Ukraine from Jan. 25 to Feb. 2 to teach roughly 80 doctors, paramedics and other first responders how to treat massive hemorrhages, serious internal injuries and obstructed airways — common injuries of war.
"Combat medicine really focuses on what we call the potentially preventable causes of death on the battlefield. It's a very focused and aggressive treatment towards those specific injuries, and it differs quite a bit from how I would do a paramedical assessment in Canada," said firefighter Nelson Bate.
Bate, who served two tours in Afghanistan with the Canadian military before becoming a firefighter in 2014, was a medical instructor for the Edmonton Fire Department. He jumped at the opportunity to go to Ukraine.
"It's quite challenging sometimes for someone who has been in the military to sit back and watch these conflicts happening overseas — feeling helpless," he said. "When I was asked if I would like to participate, I felt quite honoured and privileged to be able to."
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While Bate has led first aid training before in Canada, this trip was different.
"It felt very purposeful. It's quite a bit different than teaching a CPR course or a first aid course in Canada where someone may or may not use those skills," he said.
"In Ukraine, we knew that the people that we were teaching will likely be using these skills, unfortunately, in the near future."
Anatoli Morgotch served as translator on the trip. He moved to Theodore, Sask., from Ukraine in 1995, when he was 14. He moved to Edmonton in 2008 and has been with the city's fire department ever since.
Morgotch had not been back to Ukraine since 2002 and said that it was surreal to be back in his homeland, which is now an active war zone.
WATCH | Edmonton-area firefighters return after two-week training mission:
"It was a very good, but then humbling experience going [back] to the place where I was born," he said.
"It is unbelievable. The hardest part for me was definitely watching children interact every day, living their lives, knowing that [in] the rest of the world, children have warm beds, a warm school to go to — and children in Ukraine, they [don'] have these opportunities."