Syria's health care system is collapsing after 21 months of revolt. According to a new report by the World Health Organization, half of the country's public hospitals have been destroyed in the fighting.

Pharmacies are running out of medicine for even the most basic care. In rebel-controlled areas, field clinics and hospitals are overwhelmed. A group of Syrian-American doctors has stepped in to help, bringing in crucial supplies and providing training.

In a hotel ballroom in Antakya, Turkey, Dr. Mazen Kewara slices open a dead sheep with a sharp surgical blade.

"We will make clamping, like [for] a man," he says.

Kewara is surrounded by Syrian doctors who watch as Kewara, a vascular surgeon, demonstrates how to stitch a torn blood vessel. These surgeons have seen plenty of the real thing.

A Shortage Of Supplies

One Syrian doctor attending the course, who identified himself as Dr. Khobatt, works in a new field hospital in northern Syria on the Turkish border. He describes how his patients are often rushed in from the city of Aleppo, where airstrikes and artillery shells tear bodies apart.

There are 29 Syrian surgeons attending the course. Some asked not to be identified because they work deeper inside Syria. They are here to carry back supplies and learn everything they can from this American team.

Dr. Ahmad Nassr, a spinal surgeon who works at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, leads a workshop on shattered bones.

"One of the things they desperately need is anesthetic supplies, and they just don't have them," Nassr says.

He shows them how to use something called a fixator, with pins that screw right into the fracture so the patient can be stabilized and moved.

"I am teaching them techniques — how to put fixators on without any numbing medication — and it's a pretty cruel way to do it, but the anesthesia should really be kept for patients that really need it, for invasive procedures," says Nassr.

These American surgeons have learned, too — about how to adapt trauma medicine practiced in well-run U.S. hospitals for Syrian surgeons who now often operate without electricity or running water.

"I think given the resources that they have, they're extremely creative and extremely gifted," Nassr tells NPR.

But, he says, even a week of intensive workshops only slightly changes the odds.

Providing The Basics

"There will be patients that will die that would not die in any civilized country, and it's not because these are not good doctors; it's because they don't have the resources to take care of these patients, even the most basic things," Nassr says.

Some basics come along with the course. The Americans arrived with suitcases filled with surgical scissors, bandages, splints and portable ultrasound machines.

Dr. Mohammed, 29, is a neurosurgeon from the town of Kafranbel. He says that he's the only neurosurgeon left in all of northern Syria — and that even these basic tools can make his practice better.

"Yes, of course, of course, like the drill for the [brain]," he says. "I didn't have one, and it's a manual, but right now, I get it. I hope I can help people to live, and that's the main goal that we are working for."

Helping people to live is the goal that all of these doctors share. One of the Americans, Luay Alkotob, is a cardiologist from Michigan.

"For people who have heart attacks," he explains, "I'm the guy who goes in the middle of the night to open the blood vessel. It is not very glamorous."

He says he's been moved by the bravery of these doctors, working for more than a year without pay, taking the same risks as their patients. He is also outraged, he says, that the international community has done so little to help.

"The question is, why is it so hard to get supplies to those hospitals? It's hard to get the supplies in," Alkotob says. "It's hard to get the money for the supplies, and that part is truly, truly devastating."

Rima Marrouch contributed to this report

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

After 21 months of revolt, Syria's health care system is collapsing. According to a new report by the World Health Organization, half of the country's public hospitals have been destroyed in the fighting. Pharmacies are running out of medicine for even the most basic care. In rebel-held areas, field clinics and hospitals are overwhelmed. As NPR's Deborah Amos reports from Antakya, Turkey, a group of Syrian-American doctors has stepped in to help, bringing crucial supplies and training.

DEBORAH AMOS, BYLINE: In a hotel ballroom, Dr. Mazen Kewara, in a blue surgical gown, slices open a dead sheep with a sharp surgical blade.

DR. MAZEN KEWARA: For a vascular surgery by this sheep, like a dummy.

AMOS: What are you showing them how to do?

KEWARA: We will make a clamping, like a man.

AMOS: He's surrounded by Syrian doctors who watch as Kewara, a vascular surgeon, demonstrates how to stitch a torn blood vessel. These surgeons have seen plenty of the real thing. This doctor works in northern Syria on the Turkish border in a field hospital.

DR. KHOBATT: Yeah. It's a new hospital there. We started maybe just for 20 days.

AMOS: His patients are often rushed from the city of Aleppo where airstrikes and artillery shells tear bodies apart.

KHOBATT: My name is Khobatt, Dr. Khobatt.

AMOS: Dr. Khobatt?

KHOBATT: It's my name. It's my real name.

AMOS: Other doctors here don't give their names because they work further inside Syria and asked not to be indentified. There are 29 Syrian surgeons at this course, and they're here to carry back supplies and learn everything they can from this American team.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: (Foreign language spoken)

AMOS: Dr. Ahmad Nassr, a spinal surgeon who works at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, leads a workshop on shattered bones.

DR. AHMAD NASSR: One of the things that they desperately need is anesthetic supplies. And they just don't have them.

AMOS: He shows them how to use something called a fixator with pins that screw right into the fracture so the patient can be stabilized and moved.

NASSR: I'm teaching them techniques, how to put fixators on without any numbing medication. And it's a pretty cruel way to do it, but the anesthesia should really be kept for patients that really need it, for, you know, invasive procedures.

AMOS: These American surgeons have learned, too, about how to adapt trauma medicine practiced in well-run U.S. hospitals for Syrian surgeons who now often operate without electricity or running water.

NASSR: I think given the resources that they have, they're extremely creative and extremely gifted.

AMOS: But even a week of intense workshops, says Dr. Nassr, only slightly changes the odds.

NASSR: So there will be patients that will die that would not die in any civilized country. And it's not because these are not good doctors. It's because they don't have the resources to take care of these patients, even the most basic things.

AMOS: Some basics come along with this course. The Americans arrived with suitcases filled with surgical scissors, bandages, splints and portable ultrasound machines.

DR. MOHAMMED: Many patients. We cover a big area.

AMOS: This 29-year-old Dr. Mohammed is a neurosurgeon from the town of Kafranbel. He says he's the only neurosurgeon left in all of northern Syria, and he says even these basic tools can make his practice better.

MOHAMMED: Yes, of course. Of course. Like the drill. The drill for the...

AMOS: The brain.

MOHAMMED: Yes, yes, yes. I didn't have one. And it's a manual. But right now, I get it. I hope I can help people to live. And that's the main goal that we are working for.

AMOS: Helping people to live. That's the goal that all of these doctors share. One of the Americans, Luay Alkotob, is from Michigan. He's an interventional cardiologist. When people have heart attacks, he explains, I'm the guy who comes in the middle of the night. He says he's been moved by the bravery of these doctors, working for more than a year without pay, taking the same risks as their patients. He's also outraged, he says, that the international community has done so little to help them.

DR. LUAY ALKOTOB: The question is why is it so hard to get supplies to those hospitals? It's hard to get the supplies in. It's hard to get the money for the supplies. And that part is truly, truly devastating. You've got to give me a minute.

AMOS: Deborah Amos, NPR News, Antakya, Turkey.

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

You're listening to ALL THINGS CONSIDERED from NPR. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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