The Prague Post - German hospital reunites Ukrainian patients and medics

EUR -
AED 4.196616
AFN 73.133561
ALL 93.858721
AMD 420.289422
ANG 2.045918
AOA 1048.437149
ARS 1700.623884
AUD 1.648569
AWG 2.059741
AZN 1.966194
BAM 1.953849
BBD 2.30326
BDT 140.999174
BGN 1.932192
BHD 0.431188
BIF 3401.551467
BMD 1.142714
BND 1.475791
BOB 7.919437
BRL 5.906339
BSD 1.143588
BTN 108.946571
BWP 15.424
BYN 3.318031
BYR 22397.188349
BZD 2.299963
CAD 1.623802
CDF 2566.534672
CHF 0.919759
CLF 0.026753
CLP 1052.942078
CNY 7.758
CNH 7.761243
COP 3822.651549
CRC 521.002435
CUC 1.142714
CUP 30.281913
CVE 110.157388
CZK 24.187845
DJF 203.641955
DKK 7.47465
DOP 67.745302
DZD 152.106247
EGP 55.989772
ERN 17.140705
ETB 183.380669
FJD 2.559964
FKP 0.855837
GBP 0.85675
GEL 3.011059
GGP 0.855837
GHS 12.991025
GIP 0.855837
GMD 82.822002
GNF 10029.421752
GTQ 8.727474
GYD 239.211549
HKD 8.961903
HNL 30.608768
HRK 7.533225
HTG 149.577152
HUF 353.763568
IDR 20563.761367
ILS 3.434009
IMP 0.855837
INR 109.025457
IQD 1498.069321
IRR 1572316.903251
ISK 144.004482
JEP 0.855837
JMD 181.045812
JOD 0.810205
JPY 185.230436
KES 147.707558
KGS 99.927685
KHR 4579.646407
KMF 492.509261
KPW 1028.442722
KRW 1748.974749
KWD 0.354709
KYD 0.95309
KZT 540.813515
LAK 25822.452158
LBP 102407.799013
LKR 383.044187
LRD 207.551795
LSL 18.549366
LTL 3.374136
LVL 0.691216
LYD 7.329872
MAD 10.694487
MDL 20.115789
MGA 4848.284959
MKD 61.627649
MMK 2399.418388
MNT 4093.620504
MOP 9.238177
MRU 45.640413
MUR 53.786958
MVR 17.666279
MWK 1983.071429
MXN 19.970818
MYR 4.661868
MZN 73.030981
NAD 18.549285
NGN 1565.895002
NIO 42.079813
NOK 11.238441
NPR 174.318523
NZD 2.009891
OMR 0.439376
PAB 1.143608
PEN 3.891214
PGK 5.024202
PHP 70.29689
PKR 317.939099
PLN 4.290747
PYG 6953.237856
QAR 4.180416
RON 5.230436
RSD 117.346486
RUB 87.867008
RWF 1674.281621
SAR 4.294961
SBD 9.208605
SCR 16.903167
SDG 686.196843
SEK 11.031398
SGD 1.477655
SHP 0.853151
SLE 27.825107
SLL 23962.138936
SOS 653.607254
SRD 42.927143
STD 23651.866279
STN 24.476624
SVC 10.006444
SYP 126.306541
SZL 18.545964
THB 38.04037
TJS 10.600466
TMT 4.010925
TND 3.375103
TOP 2.751381
TRY 53.503454
TTD 7.750496
TWD 36.675625
TZS 3004.136976
UAH 50.931468
UGX 4174.013754
USD 1.142714
UYU 45.993861
UZS 13699.377408
VES 730.083514
VND 30055.084151
VUV 135.976049
WST 3.168958
XAF 655.362662
XAG 0.018513
XAU 0.000275
XCD 3.088241
XCG 2.061032
XDR 0.815007
XOF 655.31969
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.88029
ZAR 18.573685
ZMK 10285.792931
ZMW 21.012565
ZWL 367.953342
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • RBGPF

    2.5400

    68.15

    +3.73%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

  • RYCEF

    0.5400

    19.68

    +2.74%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

German hospital reunites Ukrainian patients and medics
German hospital reunites Ukrainian patients and medics / Photo: MORRIS MAC MATZEN - AFP

German hospital reunites Ukrainian patients and medics

Four Ukrainian flags are flapping in the cold northern wind outside the university hospital (UKSH) in Luebeck on Germany's Baltic coast.

Text size:

Since the beginning of the Russian invasion, Ukrainian nurses and doctors at this ultra-modern facility have been treating patients from their home country.

Originally from Chernivtsi, close to Ukraine's border with Romania, Oleksandra Shaniotailo, 31, was taken on as a nurse two months ago.

"I am waiting for my nursing degree to be recognised," she tells AFP in her newly acquired German.

"In Ukraine, I worked for 11 years in a hospital," says the young woman, who is waiting to meet the Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba.

- Young refugees -

On the fringes of a meeting of G7 foreign ministers a few dozen kilometres away from Luebeck, Ukraine's top diplomat has come to visit the hospital, where 61 young refugees have been taken on as nursing staff.

Between selfies with the guest of honour, the new team members share their patriotic support with Kuleba.

"I am working in outpatient care for five months before starting a four-month course for my degree to be recognised," says Anastasiia Demicheva, 20, from the same town in Bukovina.

The fragile young woman, whose make-up barely hides her pale complexion, is serving meals to patients, bathing them or helping them walk up and down the corridors of the vast hospital, which employs some 2,000 medics between Luebeck and the more northern city of Kiel.

In parallel, Anastasiia is taking German courses to be able to speak fluently with her patients.

The Ukrainian foreign minister also visits the bedsides of the Ukrainian patients who have been transferred to the hospital.

"We have cancer patients whose chemotherapy has been interrupted" by the war, UKSH president, Jens Scholz, 63, tells AFP.

Among them is Oleg Kovalenko, whose cancer was diagnosed in Kyiv. With a sallow face and wearing his yellow hospital gown, he tells the visiting minister how grateful he is to be receiving treatment in Germany.

- 'Thank you' -

"It's an enormous privilege," he says in Ukrainian, before saying "danke" ("thank you") in German.

The hospital is also hosting Ukrainian children who need major surgery or suffer from cardiac problems.

"We've taken on nearly 500 Ukrainian patients" since the end of February, says Scholz.

When war came to Ukraine, the hospital sent equipment and medicine to hospitals in Lviv, Zhytomyr and Ivano-Frankivsk. More than three million euros ($3.1 million) of aid have been, while a the fifth support package of respiratory equipment, beds and operating equipment is ready to be sent to the Ukraine on May 19.

Behind the Ukraine partnership, first established in 2014, are a man and wife from the country who work at the hospital, employed as a surgeon and a biologist, respectively.

"I've been here for 12 years and have become the head of transplants" at the hospital, Hryhoriy Lapshyn, 40, tells AFP. From Germany "I can better help people in Ukraine than I could if I had stayed," he says.

The young Ukrainians who have just arrived will become nurses. "Ukraine will benefit, too," he says.

The pair do not hide the pain they feel seeing the horrors which have descended on their country, dismissing critics who say they should be working with war wounded in Ukraine.

"My heart bleeds," says Olha Lapshyna, her voice trembling. "I ask myself often what I am doing here. Why do I have the privilege of being here while other women stayed in Ukraine?"

"Sometimes there are no more emotions, just things to do," her husband adds, saying he has been caught in a whirlwind since the start of the war. "You have to help people. You get calls non-stop."

On his swift tour through the hospital, the Ukrainian Foreign Minister pays homage to their work.

"War is not only soldiers who are fighting," Kuleba says. "I’m very touched that you found the role that you can play" in this war, he says.

V.Nemec--TPP