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| December 11, 2003 |
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Christine Pashley |
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Article from Archives of Surgery (pdf) Download high-resolution images |
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OHSU TRAUMA PHYSICIAN RETURNS FROM WAR IN IRAQ WITH A MISSIONRichard Mullins, M.D., now hopes to encourage other surgeons to serve their country through an article in the Archives of Surgery
Mullins' essay chronicles how three American surgeons in the prime of their careers enlisted other health care providers to volunteer for service in France during World War I, then went on to serve in the U.S. Army Medical Corps. The surgeons survived and returned to their families, academic positions and resumed their professional careers. Mullins said "Nearly a century ago, George W. Crile, Harvey Cushing and George E. Brewer were surgeons who responded to the national crisis of their time. Contemporary surgeons can learn from their example." Mullins learned from their example and the role model provided by his father, a veteran of World War II. The OHSU trauma surgeon was called up to serve in the Iraq war in the prime of his career, leaving behind his wife and two children. His was a similar situation to his own father's, whose photo is on Mullins' office wall. "In his 20s, he left his family to serve in the Army from 1941 to 1946. What a sacrifice," said Mullins. "I was influenced by my father. The new generation doesn't have those same role models." He enlisted in the Navy Reserve eight years ago. Donald Trunkey, M.D., OHSU trauma surgeon and professor of surgery, was then chairman of the Department of Surgery in the OHSU School of Medicine and had just returned from serving in the Gulf War. Trunkey told Mullins there was an insufficient number of trauma surgeons to care for the causalities during that war. After talking it over with his family, Mullins decided his country needed him if the United States should ever go to war again. "Rich Mullins is to be commended. He has a real sense of duty and patriotism," said Trunkey. "It is a sad commentary, but most young surgeons do not support the reserve or the military mission. It is such a pleasure when a person like Rich does what is right." The United States needed him in March of 2003 after waging war with Iraq. Mullins, the chief of OHSU's trauma service, was deployed to serve in Iraq and traded his title for the rank of captain in the Navy's 4th Medical Battalion. His first stop was Camp Pendleton in Southern California. There his battalion joined the 1st Marine Division. He and his comrades were immunized against smallpox and anthrax. In mid-April they flew to Kuwait, where they lived in Camp Okinawa, a tactical staging area in the desert near the Iraq border.
Mullins is candid about how uncomfortable his tour of duty was. He says it was a long, largely unpleasant experience. It was hot, with an average midday temperature of 120 to 130 degrees. They lived in tents and felt like prisoners with severe restrictions on what they could do and where they could go. The trauma surgeon who usually puts in 80-hour workweeks at OHSU was bored between May 15 and the end of August because there was little need for his services. The Shock Trauma Platoon in the tent next door to the FRSS1, which functioned like OHSU's emergency department, treated Marines and a few civilians with a wide range of problems, including dehydration and kidney stones, but only rarely were there patients who needed the skills of a surgeon. The next stop on his tour was Al Najaf with the Marines' 1st Battalion, 7th Regiment. Mullins FRSS1 was sent there at the end of August in case fighting broke out after Ayatollah Mohammed Baqer al-Hakim was assassinated in car bombing attack at his mosque, which left dozens of worshippers dead. There was no civil unrest and three weeks later Mullins drove with the 1/7 in a convoy to Kuwait. Demobilized in San Diego, Mullins finally returned home to Oregon Oct. 10.
Would he be willing to go to war again? Mullins replied, "I'm too old. This experience was really hard on my body - but if they needed me, I would." It's a message his essay reflects as well. When referencing Harvey Cushing's response for a call to duty on the day before Christmas 1914, Mullins' included the old surgeon's reply "I should of course be glad to go ... with an idea of service." The young trauma surgeon who just returned from service in Iraq followed that with, "In the 21st century, terrorists have threatened America's civilian populations, and we find we are engaged in a new kind of war. American surgeons are once again called to continue a tradition of national service in a time of crisis."
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