),
Damascus Hospital administrator.
Both the Syria Medical Emergency
Association, of which Dr.Naji is a representative and the Syrian
Medical Association, have large memberships with the reputation of
being fiercely independent of and resistant to outside influences.
At the same time they have
achieved individual treatment and medical ethics standards that help
make Syria’s medical services the highest rated in the Middle East.
Amnesty qualifies its findings
with complaints that it did not have access to Syrian hospital
staff, and that it wanted to protect its “witnesses” by withholding
some specifics such as time, place, and circumstances of alleged
wrongdoing by members the Syrian medical community, as well as the
unwillingness of alleged victims of abuse to come forward.
For their part, Syrian medical
staff, more than two dozen I met individually with, complained to
this observer that AI’s Report is deeply flawed and that in fact
Syrian hospitals welcome foreign visitors for tours and dialogue
with all questions honestly addressed. Syria’s medical profession
has justifiably taken umbrage at what it considers, as one Physician
described, “Amnesty International’s “gratuitous defamation of
Syria’s medical community.”
According to Amnesty's report, but
without providing convincing collaborative evidence, wounded
patients in at least four government-run hospitals had been
subjected to torture and other ill-treatment, both by medical
workers and security personnel.
AI’s charges that Syrian medical
staff humiliate or refuse to treat patients brought laughter from
some care givers at Damascus Hospital, as they explained the strict
procedure they abide by from the moment a patient arrives at the
emergency entrance.
“We treat each patient to the best
of our ability and we are strictly forbidden from questioning them
about the circumstances of their injury,” Dr. Mahmoud Naji
explained.
This observer was invited to
literally follow arriving emergency room patients as they were
admitted and treated and until they were assigned a bed in the
appropriate ward.
A nurse, who was filling out a
patient’s medical forms noted, “In certain cases if there was an
auto accident, for example, and an injured person arrives while the
accident is being investigated then we could contact authorities.
However, our patient privacy rules are very strict in Syria and we
can only ask medical and certainly not political questions,
“according to one ER intern as she took the blood pressure of an
arriving young woman who complained of stomach cramps.
One Physician who had trained at
Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston explained, “ I am sure
there must be some abuse and especially in the middle of an area
where there is fighting, but I have personally never heard of any
physician or medical personnel doing what some Western media have
alleged without submitting proof. He continued, “Do police officers
sometimes come to the hospital? Yes but it’s like what you would
see, for example, in America on a week-end night at the emergency
room in maybe the 200 largest cities., isn’t it?
When I was training in Boston and
with all that goes on in the early hours of the morning in big
cities, one sees more police cars outside emergency rooms than
ambulances.
While it’s not like that here, the
police presumably sometimes have reason to suspect that a crime may
have been committed and the arriving injured person might be the
victim or the perpetrator and an officer has the duty to complete a
police report. I believe it’s similar anywhere isn’t it?”
Another Dr. commented, “And yes,
our medical profession has been criticized along with our government
because it is claimed by some that some injured people may not want
to come to our hospital thinking we might report them to the police.
We will not. Does that not also happen in every society?
Someone is injured while doing
something wrong or criminal and they are afraid of being arrested so
they seek alternative treatment from friends or private clinics.
Yes, that sometimes happens in our country. Every citizen can choose
where they seek treatment.”
This observer also toured Syria’s
Al Mouwasat government hospital, which like all government hospital
in Syria is free to all, and met at length with a variety of staff
just as AI could have and still can. It is Syria’s oldest and
largest and has received dozens of patients over the past six months
who had been injured during anti-government demonstrations.
Al Mouwasat, with approximately
850 beds was founded in 1946, the year the French occupiers left.
1946 was also the year US President Harry Truman promised to “take
on that mean trust-the American Medical Association” and enact free
health care for all Americans. Nearly 66 years later the gap between
Syria and the US in terms of civilized and affordable medical care
for its citizens is vast.
I participated in briefings from
several physicians and staff including the Hospital administrator,
physicians and nurses. We discussed at length any subject I raised
including AI accusations.
Among those who discussed rumors
that some Syrian medical staff refused treatment or reported to
authorities or intimidated patients were surgeon Dr. Osama Yousef
Shahin, Dr. Ayham Obied vascular surgeon, Dr. Imad Alasha, Director
of the ER Department, and ER surgeon Dr. D. Shadia as well as
Mouwasat hospital’s Administrator and various staff.
All can be contacted directly, by
AI or others, via the hospital email address which is info@almouwasat
and arrangements can be made for visitors to come and see for
themselves.
One doctor who appeared a bit
offended by AI type accusations even offered to request from among
scores of current or former patients their permission to provide AI
with their phone numbers so they could discuss privately AI’s
sweeping and unsupported allegations against the Syrian Medical
community including the charge that they work in cooperation with
various militias but also with government security services.
Dr. Alusha explained: “A few
casualties from May are still hospitalized and others even come from
“field hospitals” set up by opponents of the government. We do not
ask them anything about where they received earlier treatment or
their political views. We have not seen any of the claimed patient
betrayal events described in some western media reports.”
Al Mouwasat has 4 ER operating
theatres and routinely does about 50 operations per day. As with
other hospitals visited, May 2011 was the most active month recently
for Syria’s ER departments which are always open 24/7 with no cost
to any patient, domestic or foreign.
Al Mouwasat hospital, like
Damascus General Hospital and others, has received patients from
Deraa, Homs, Hama, Idlib, and other communities according to Dr.
Shahin who explained: “Any human being will be treated here without
charge and without politics or the police being summoned and for as
long as necessary until the patient regains good health. Jewish
patients are also welcomed and while our government does not
recognize the legitimacy of Israel, Israeli citizens will receive
the same care as everyone else. Just yesterday we received Lebanese
from the Bekaa Valley with gunshot wounds. They come here because
our care is of high quality and it’s free ever for foreigners and
without political complications. We specialize also in Total
Parenteral Nutrition (TPN) which attracts patients from across Syria
and abroad. I think I speak for almost every Syrian medical person
what I insist that we are doctors and care givers with a variety of
political views which we leave at home. We comply with our
Hippocratic Oath which we take seriously.”
According to Syria’s Ministry of
Health, it has not received any complaint to date, either from the
patients or from their relatives about maltreatment or political
pressure.
In its Report: “Health Crisis:
The Syrian Government Targets the Wounded and Health Workers,”
Amnesty International falls significantly below an objective
standard and fails to shoulder its burden of proof for the charges
it levels at Syria’s medical community.
The fact that AI appears to have
been somewhat lazy in its work and continues hyping its deeply
flawed “investigation” is egregious.
AI also failed to meet the
standard of investigative work that we who will continue to support
and endorse its human rights work expect from it.
Franklin Lamb is reachable c/o