A Denver physician’s assistant is in Ukraine helping meet “such a significant need” for medical care

Doug Amis, center, and another volunteer helping out a Ukrainian woman. (Photo courtesy of Global Care Force)
Doug Amis, center, and another volunteer helping out a Ukrainian woman. (Photo courtesy of Global Care Force)

Doug Amis never knows if he’s going to spend the day in a building, a tent or a makeshift clinic.

The physician’s assistant from Denver has been in Ukraine for two weeks with the Kansas-based nonprofit Global Care Force to provide medical treatment to people living in war-torn cities.

“We’ve set up locations in churches and schools. Today we were actually in a medical clinic, which I was very happy about. I mean, I was in a closet in a medical clinic, but you have to work with what you got,” Amis said in a Zoom interview while stationed in Odesa. “I’ve been on medical mission trips where it’s a tent, or even just sheets hung up on the beach.”

Medical teams made up of two doctors and three nurses will spend a month in Ukraine, using two mobile clinic vans to visit eight different communities.

“In the first six weeks of Russia in Ukraine, we began to recognize that the doctors in smaller communities were being reassigned to active combat zones,” said Scott Oberkrom, the CEO of Global Care Force. “The residents of the communities who were not able to relocate or flee from Ukraine are left without health care. So we developed the model of mobile clinics with in-country partners.”

Amis and his team have helped to provide medical attention to people who have chronic illnesses like heart disease and diabetes, while also treating people with severe physical injuries.

He helped a group of people who were hiding in a basement for 40 days. They were 60- to 70-year-olds with different chronic illnesses who weren’t getting their necessary medicine. They also developed high blood pressure and post-traumatic stress disorder.

“We try to do the best we can with the resources available. With the lack of medical infrastructure here in Ukraine, hospitals are working with pretty much less than a skeleton crew,” Amis said. “Now of course there’s such a significant need.”

To avoid being captured, another man lay in a ditch for three days with shrapnel in his foot. He managed to find a small village and hide in a basement with other villagers. Amis and his group were able to help treat his injury and find him an actual hospital. Since then, they’ve continued to monitor and care for his foot.

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