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Monday, February 21, 2011
Military Hospitals Treat Soldiers And Civilians Alike In Kandahar
American Army doctor Lt. Col. Barry Steinberg of Jacksonville, Florida (L) chats with burn patient Abdul Rahman, 13, while an Afghan Army doctor looks on at Kandahar Regional Military Hospital in Kandahar, Afghanistan. Six months ago, Abdul Rahman's clothes were soaked with gasoline after a long day working in a fuel station to make extra money in rural Afghanistan, and they caught fire, burning him so badly his skin melted and his chin fused to his chest when it scarred over. Abdul Rahman's father had no money for doctors for his son and treated him at home, spreading butter on his burns every night. Several weeks ago he trekked with his son to Kandahar looking for treatment, and eventually ended up at the American-funded Afghan Army military hospital in Kandahar. Afghan medics under supervision of Lt. Col.Steinberg separated the Abdul Rahman's chin from his chest in a series of surgeries, and while his burns need daily treatment he's expected to fully recover. "These people have been very kind," Abdul Rahman's father, Abdul Fatah, says.
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