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Losing With “The Gimper”

Osama bin Chimpy

The handle is a harsh one for sure, but I used it because it fits Chimpy so well.

Many people have no idea how many Americans are losing limbs, courtesy of Chimpy’s War on Iraq. The number of lower limb injuries are so numerous that doctors of podiatry are in high demand in the hell on Earth Chimpy created. While it may be true that the armor the soldiers are wearing have cut down on the number of fatalities, the number of maimed who are coming back to this country are going to create a major need for special therapies-therapies that we are ill-equipped to deal with.

I fully expect that these young men and women are going to eventually find themselves abandones, because once they’re busted up only a select few will find their way into Chimpy photo-ops. For the most part, Chimpy and his handmaidens of the MSM don’t like to acknowledge that anything bad is happening to GIs in Iraq. We know better, of course; we are beginning to see them, ourselves, in homeless shelters and on the streets. We’re going to see a “surge” of homeless vets minus an arm or a leg. That much you can count on. Since the Pentagon fudges the true number of wounded and the MSM does whatever it can to help the Pentagon do the fudging, it may be years before we know the extent of it.

Heckuva job, Chimpy the Gimper.

newfascism.jpgSupport The Troops!

A study released in advance of the American Podiatric Medical Association’s (APMA) 95th Annual Meeting in Philadelphia reveals nearly 68 percent of all U.S. soldiers wounded in the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts are a result of extremity injuries and nearly 22 percent of those injuries involve the foot and/or ankle. To meet the war’s demands of lower-limb injuries, podiatric physicians are on the surgical front lines for the first time ever. No longer relegated to non-critical cases, podiatric physicians have seen their role expanded to match their medical and surgical training.

Army Lt. Col. Michael Neary, a podiatric physician and surgeon stationed at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center (LRMC) in Germany, conducted the study reviewing 42 months of retrospective records of U.S. troops admitted to the podiatric service unit at LRMC. After assessing more than 350 patient records from March 2003 to September 2006, Neary, concluded that podiatric physicians were critical to the overall LRMC medical mission. LRMC is the only U.S. military medical facility outside the United States to treat severely injured American soldiers fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“The study’s findings confirm the fundamental role that podiatric physicians are playing in the ongoing conflicts,” said Neary, originally from Willow Grove, Pennsylvania. “This study was a way to validate podiatrists’ role in the war and educate civilians and the U.S. Army about the extent of injuries the podiatric staff is seeing and treating.”

Neary, who will present his findings at the APMA Annual Meeting on Saturday, August 18, found that 10 percent of all cases at LRMC involve injuries treated by the podiatric staff. The most common injuries were to the soft tissue or bone and usually resulted from an improvised explosive device (IED) or gunshot wound.

On average, the podiatric staff at LRMC admitted four soldiers per week to the inpatient unit, where the average stay was four days. Additionally, they saw 15 to 20 outpatient injuries per week. For less severe injuries, soldiers were treated and sent back to active duty. The severely wounded, were debrided (cleaned) and stabilized for transfer to one of three military medical facilities in the United States. Those patients requiring a potential amputation are sent to an amputee center for further evaluation.

Generally, amputations are not performed at LRMC. Instead soldiers with severe lower limb wounds are sent to high-level U.S. military medical facilities. There they receive input from surgeons, a prosthesist, family members and other amputees before deciding if an amputation is necessary. Of the 30,000 troops seen by the orthopedic/podiatry division at LRMC in the past four years, only ten amputations have been performed onsite.

Neary summed up his four years of service at LRMC with one word – rewarding. “I’ve been given the unique opportunity to make a difference in soldiers’ lives.”

3 Responses to “Losing With “The Gimper””

  1. Larry Says:

    What a life to look forward tom they serve their country in a war for no legitimate reason and their compensation is the loss of one or more limbs.

  2. sptmck Says:

    Too bad the MSM hasn’t emphasized this information. Instead, they are now recycling OJ news. And of course the departure of the turd, which, I know I being cynical, I found the timing to be very calculated. Meanwhile, tensions are heating up with Iran–there’s a shocker–and our poor troops remain stuck in more ways than one.

  3. Mary Ellen Says:

    When the war first started in Iraq, Stephanapolis used to do a “In Memoriam” for the soldiers who died. They would show a picture of each soldier and they had all the sad music in the background…lots of flags. Now…nothing.

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