The Prague Post - Scar tissue: Treating war's marks on Ukrainians

EUR -
AED 4.292157
AFN 74.798297
ALL 96.081506
AMD 435.777805
ANG 2.092123
AOA 1071.724593
ARS 1628.082223
AUD 1.653995
AWG 2.106635
AZN 1.980514
BAM 1.958455
BBD 2.33034
BDT 142.773581
BGN 1.99772
BHD 0.441166
BIF 3438.447352
BMD 1.16873
BND 1.486109
BOB 7.994634
BRL 6.022933
BSD 1.156984
BTN 107.543754
BWP 15.788542
BYN 3.401354
BYR 22907.100883
BZD 2.326935
CAD 1.61775
CDF 2688.077984
CHF 0.921888
CLF 0.027141
CLP 1071.677561
CNY 8.014445
CNH 7.979057
COP 4314.564139
CRC 536.730028
CUC 1.16873
CUP 30.971335
CVE 110.395317
CZK 24.410122
DJF 206.031995
DKK 7.472834
DOP 70.285598
DZD 154.764365
EGP 63.946692
ERN 17.530945
ETB 180.65792
FJD 2.584649
FKP 0.883159
GBP 0.870429
GEL 3.132031
GGP 0.883159
GHS 12.736034
GIP 0.883159
GMD 85.912134
GNF 10149.718202
GTQ 8.850735
GYD 242.025701
HKD 9.153432
HNL 30.722787
HRK 7.529896
HTG 151.685015
HUF 377.415553
IDR 19863.728909
ILS 3.62061
IMP 0.883159
INR 108.069511
IQD 1515.661513
IRR 1537902.110447
ISK 143.800387
JEP 0.883159
JMD 182.126159
JOD 0.82856
JPY 185.026847
KES 151.99264
KGS 102.205267
KHR 4636.266306
KMF 499.047449
KPW 1051.859453
KRW 1722.923644
KWD 0.361419
KYD 0.964166
KZT 537.644372
LAK 25525.827924
LBP 103609.880771
LKR 365.088133
LRD 212.878616
LSL 19.551025
LTL 3.450955
LVL 0.706953
LYD 7.395122
MAD 10.849131
MDL 20.213407
MGA 4832.593683
MKD 61.669015
MMK 2454.46379
MNT 4176.23509
MOP 9.337741
MRU 45.979539
MUR 54.64966
MVR 18.056768
MWK 2006.237348
MXN 20.473338
MYR 4.652126
MZN 74.739927
NAD 19.550941
NGN 1615.230794
NIO 42.577547
NOK 11.175866
NPR 172.079052
NZD 2.003776
OMR 0.449378
PAB 1.156939
PEN 3.962773
PGK 5.07893
PHP 69.409676
PKR 325.296532
PLN 4.257629
PYG 7502.107637
QAR 4.229192
RON 5.092624
RSD 117.328456
RUB 91.661946
RWF 1689.984156
SAR 4.38814
SBD 9.406617
SCR 16.038338
SDG 702.406871
SEK 10.885168
SGD 1.48909
SHP 0.87685
SLE 28.712002
SLL 24507.688773
SOS 661.193659
SRD 43.760724
STD 24190.343828
STN 24.533474
SVC 10.12377
SYP 129.383705
SZL 19.546754
THB 37.452526
TJS 11.008408
TMT 4.102241
TND 3.404915
TOP 2.81402
TRY 52.020933
TTD 7.850644
TWD 37.138137
TZS 3050.384506
UAH 50.281305
UGX 4344.128063
USD 1.16873
UYU 46.921411
UZS 14115.259127
VES 553.355153
VND 30767.392056
VUV 139.365103
WST 3.233046
XAF 656.844781
XAG 0.015116
XAU 0.000242
XCD 3.15855
XCG 2.085236
XDR 0.816915
XOF 656.856037
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.800392
ZAR 19.232261
ZMK 10519.967626
ZMW 22.417203
ZWL 376.330466
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.14

    -0.18%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2400

    15.75

    -1.52%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    22.29

    -0.27%

  • RIO

    0.6500

    94.66

    +0.69%

  • RELX

    -0.2500

    33.36

    -0.75%

  • BCE

    -0.4300

    23.83

    -1.8%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.69

    -0.32%

  • BCC

    0.9600

    74.71

    +1.28%

  • NGG

    0.4600

    87.52

    +0.53%

  • VOD

    0.1700

    15.31

    +1.11%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    55.84

    -0.95%

  • BTI

    0.0900

    58.8

    +0.15%

  • AZN

    -2.0200

    200.81

    -1.01%

  • BP

    -0.2400

    47.24

    -0.51%

Scar tissue: Treating war's marks on Ukrainians
Scar tissue: Treating war's marks on Ukrainians / Photo: Roman PILIPEY - AFP

Scar tissue: Treating war's marks on Ukrainians

A laser beam moved slowly over Sergiy Pryshchepa's chest and stomach, treating numerous scars from burns he suffered when his car ran over an anti-tank mine close to Kyiv.

Text size:

The 34-year-old comes regularly to this private clinic in the Ukrainian capital for a programme offering free treatment for civilians and military personnel with severe burns and scarring received in the war.

Soon after Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, Pryshchepa left Kyiv with his wife and 10-year-old son and went to a village 100 kilometers (60 miles) to the north.

But the area came under attack and on March 14, the family decided to flee again. On the way, their car was blown up by an anti-tank mine.

"The explosion was on my wife's side, and she took the blow on herself. Our son was in the back, he was covered by the seat and was not wounded," but he "suffers from psychological trauma", said the commercial director of a company that makes lifts.

"The first thing I asked at the hospital was 'How did I not lose my head?'," he said, showing a picture of his car, which was completely charred and torn apart.

Sixteen months later, he had skin grafts from his legs and several operations on his jaw and one hand.

Now he attends the Shupeniuk clinic in Kyiv, which is one of 19 across the country offering the free treatment.

"Before giving laser treatment, we use certain medications that soften the rough scar tissue... First injections, then laser resurfacing, and thanks to this (scars) become less thick, lighter, less rough", said Kateryna Bezvershenko, the dermatologist treating Pryshchepa.

"Half of our patients are civilians, and not only from the Kyiv region... There is a man who has just been hit by a drone in his apartment. His mother died. He survived but he is badly burned," she added.

- 'Hands were burning' -

The dermatologist was also treating 35-year-old Feliks Rasko, a volunteer who joined the military at the start of the conflict.

His hands were seriously burnt in October in the eastern war zone, when the building where he slept was struck by Russians.

He said he realised his hands were "burning".

"I woke up from a strong blow and everything around was burning, the walls were on fire," he recounted.

He has also had operations and skin grafts from a leg.

After the latest laser session on his scars, streams of blood run down his fingers.

"If you compare this to the treatments I had at the beginning... it's now like a mosquito bite," he said. His hands, however, "constantly itch".

- 'Lucky to be treated' -

"I have been very lucky, starting from the moment when those missiles flew at us and lucky that I am treated like this. Not everyone is treated like this," he said.

"Even for the ointments they give me, I don't pay anything. Everything is free and it really helps me," he added, expressing gratitude as a single laser treatment session usually costs hundreds of dollars.

The project was conceived at the start of the Russian invasion and launched last summer.

It is financed by private donations in partnership with the Ukrainian health ministry and has treated around 150 people.

Bezvershenko has already treated around a dozen war victims since joining the project, saying she is helping them "with great joy".

"It's very important to me because I am a medical doctor and I do not take part in military operations. I have felt a great need to help our military and people who have been affected by the war," she said.

"I don't get anything out of this except inner satisfaction and the joy of being able to help people because I see such stories."

C.Zeman--TPP