BMJ  2004;328:903 (10 April), doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7444.903

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PERSONAL VIEW

Road Trauma, a socially accepted horror movie

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

Ihave the incredible good fortune to have been born in a rich, peaceful country. I know nothing of war or terrorism, apart from the images I see on the television news. But if television wars have any "justification," then what of the war that I have to attend to—a war that kills every day? Absurdly, in my country, Belgium, a total of 1500 people die each year, with a cortège of thousands mentally or physically disabled. Worldwide, my war kills millions.

I cannot count the number of dead or disabled people that I have dealt with over the past 20 years in the mobile intensive care unit or in the emergency room.

Our hospital invests large amounts of money in staffing and equipment in order to improve the immediate on-site care of those injured in road traffic crashes. The hope is to minimise the consequences of major trauma. I know . . . [Full text of this article]

Guy Mazairac, coordinator

mobile intensive care unit, Centre Hospitalier Régional Namur, Belgium mazairac.guy{at}skynet.be


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Relevant Article

War on the roads: two years on
Ian Roberts and Kamran Abbasi
BMJ 2004 328: 845. [Extract] [Full Text] [PDF]

This article has been cited by other articles:

  • Roberts, I., Abbasi, K. (2004). War on the roads: two years on. BMJ 328: 845-845 [Full text]  



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