• 19 hours ago
Rina Reznik, a teacher-turned-medic, has been saving lives on the Ukrainian frontline since Russia's full-scale invasion began in 2022.
Transcript
00:00Rina Reznik, Ukrainian combat medic, says she does not remember her life before February
00:062022.
00:08When Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Rina was studying biology in Kharkiv.
00:12She has spent the past almost three years at the front lines rescuing Ukrainian soldiers.
00:18The amount of casualties now is enormous.
00:22You simply cannot remember the faces of people you were working on till the day.
00:29Sometimes it could be like a hundred of them in a day, and a lot of them have really huge
00:36wounds, really a lot of fractures, and you cannot save everyone.
00:45You cannot use a lot of resources because every minute another portion of casualties
00:52could come.
00:53And the most scary word in Ukrainian military doctor vocabulary is triage.
01:03It's a thing that you must choose who you will be saving now and who will wait.
01:10Wounded soldiers often don't have this precious time, Rina says, as she explains that all
01:15medical evacuations from the front lines are being targeted and attacked by Russian forces,
01:20which means sometimes it can take days to evacuate the wounded.
01:25I really want to pay attention about how fatigued we are in this war, soldiers, surgeons, officers,
01:33so on, all of the people that connect their life with war completely, but it simply doesn't
01:42matter because we don't have an ability to rest, no one of us.
01:48The only ability to rest is to get wounded in this war and after it to get physical rehabilitation.
01:58As Russia's war against Ukraine shows, no sign of ending, soldiers and medics cannot
02:03yet get more time to rest and recover.

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