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Monday, November 15, 2004

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TheIowaChannel.com - News - Imogene Soldier Dies In Iraq

Imogene Soldier Dies In Iraq
Maher, 21, Loved Farming With His Family

POSTED: 9:37 pm CST November 13, 2004
UPDATED: 10:05 pm CST November 13, 2004

The U.S. Defense Department reports that Iowa soldier Jarrod Maher, 21, was killed by "non-hostile" gunfire Friday.

The Imogene native and Shenandoah High School graduate died in the Baghdad suburb of Abu Ghraib. The Pentagon did not give any more details.

Jarrod's father, Kevin, learned of his son's death late Friday. The military said the circumstances surrounding Maher's death are under investigation.TheIowaChannel.com - News - Imogene Soldier Dies In Iraq

Our Wounded need us


U.S. patient load surges at military hospital in Germany
By Katharine A. Schmidt, Special for USA TODAY
LANDSTUHL, Germany — The number of injured U.S. military personnel arriving at the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center this week — most from the offensive against insurgents in the Iraqi city of Fallujah — reached its highest level since April, a U.S. military official here said Sunday.

An Army helicopter crew delivers a Marine seriously wounded in Fallujah to Baghdad. The Marine later died of his wounds.
John Moore, AP

The troops coming in over the past week have been more seriously injured than usual, and twice as many have been wounded in battle, said Army Col. Rhonda Cornum, commander of the hospital. She added that the influx has not yet let up.

"When I see a sustained decrease over more than 24 hours, I'll believe it," Cornum said.

Landstuhl is a medical center that treats U.S. military personnel stationed in Europe, the Middle East and Afghanistan.

Patients treated here are not capable of returning to duty within seven working days.

Cornum said 419 patients, including one American civilian, have been flown for treatment to Landstuhl since Nov. 8, the day after the offensive began against militants in Fallujah, 40 miles west of Baghdad. (Related item: Troops target insurgent holdouts in Fallujah)

She said 95% of those patients have come from Iraq, and 5% from Afghanistan. Most of those from Iraq were wounded in Fallujah, but Cornum could not say exactly how many.

There have been two peaks in the patient load: 98 arrived Thursday, 44 on Friday, 94 on Saturday, and 49 on Sunday, Cornum said. All of the patients have been U.S. citizens.

Cornum said the last time the hospital experienced a similar surge of patients was in April, when U.S. forces led a previous offensive on Fallujah. Before the new offensive, the average number of patients admitted daily had been 32. In the past week, that number has more than doubled to 70. On Sunday, the number of patients in the hospital was 150, compared with the typical average of 100. The injuries suffered include gunshot and blast wounds and burns.

The seriousness of injuries is reflected by the number of inpatients.

About half the patients admitted since the Fallujah offensive began have needed to be hospitalized. Hospital spokeswoman Marie Shaw said most patients usually receive outpatient care.

More than 50% of incoming patients have had battle wounds this past week, compared with 25% before the offensive. Among those seriously injured patients, 37 are in the intensive care unit.

Because of the heavier-than-usual load and the increased seriousness of injuries, the hospital has had to call in help from military facilities in the area.

Doctors have been working longer shifts and skipping days off. The hospital also has had two times the normal number of chaplains on duty, Cornum said.

"This was not a holiday weekend for us," said Air Force Col. Todd Hess, deputy commander for clinical services, referring to Veterans Day.

The hospital staff numbered 1,800 before the invasion of Iraq in March 2003. A hospital reserve unit has joined the staff since then.

Some additional support staff has been brought in since the Fallujah offensive began. No specifics were provided.

The number of beds in the medical-surgical ward has grown from 64 to 117. The number could be increased if necessary, Cornum said. The intensive care unit has gone from 20 to 27 beds.

There is a bright spot amid the news of heavy casualties: Many more servicemembers survive battlefield injuries than during the Persian Gulf War, Cornum said.

Since the war in 1991, military forces have upgraded surgical teams near the battlefield and introduced medical transport flights that can get a servicemember to Landstuhl in 12 hours.

"Many people in other wars died of their wounds," Cornum said. "The number of survivors of injuries is much higher now."

Since the beginning of the war in Afghanistan, the staff at Landstuhl has treated 20,330 patients, Shaw said. Of those, more than 95% were Americans. More than 3,000 patients came from the Afghan conflict, and more than 17,200 from Iraq.

However, there are 36 nationalities among those patients, who include contractors for the U.S. military and servicemembers of coalition partners.

No Iraqis are being treated at Landstuhl.

Fourteen patients have died at Landstuhl since the invasion of Afghanistan in November 2001. None has died there during the latest Fallujah offensive.

Most patients stay three or four days, Shaw said.

Those who require further treatment are sent to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington or Bethesda (Md.) National Naval Medical Center.

U.S. soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment

U.S. soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment assemble outside Falluja awaiting further orders November 10, 2004. U.S. warplanes, artillery and mortars struck areas across Falluja on Monday as groups of diehard insurgents held out to the last in the week-long battle. Picture taken November 10, 2004. EDITORIAL USE ONLY REUTERS/Staff Sgt. Michael Nasworthy/U.S. Army Yahoo! News - World Photos - Reuters

US Marines of the 1st division get ready

US Marines of the 1st division get ready after overnighting in a house in the western part of Fallujah, Iraq , Monday, Nov. 15, 2004. U.S. ground forces were trying to corner the remaining resistance in the city. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus) Yahoo! News - World Photos - AP

US Marines of the 1st division enter a house

US Marines of the 1st division enter a house to take up position in the western part of Fallujah, Iraq , Monday, Nov. 15, 2004. U.S. ground forces were trying to corner the remaining resistance in the city. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus) Yahoo! News - World Photos - AP

U.S. Marines of the 1st Division rest outside a house

U.S. Marines of the 1st Division rest outside a house in the western part of Fallujah, Iraq Monday, Nov. 15, 2004. U.S. ground forces were trying to corner the remaining resistance in the city. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus) Yahoo! News - World Photos - AP

A wounded U.S. soldier is treated by medical personnel

A wounded U.S. soldier is treated by medical personnel at a forward medical aid post on the northern outskirts of Falluja November 13, 2004. U.S. warplanes, artillery and mortars attacked areas across Falluja on Monday as diehard insurgents held out to the last in the week-long battle. Photo by Reuters Tv/Reuters Yahoo! News - World Photos - Reuters



New attacks on Mosul police posts: "Anti-US insurgents storm two police stations in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, witnesses say."

In BBC: Conflict with Iraq



Charity waits over Fallujah body: "Colleagues of kidnapped British aid worker Margaret Hassan said they cannot rule out the possibility that a mutilated body of a Western woman found in Fallujah is the captured humanitarian."

In Ananova: War In Iraq



Falluja Fighting Persists; Aid Convoy Rejected: "U.S. warplanes, artillery andmortars struck areas across Falluja Monday as groups of diehardinsurgents held out to the last in the week-long battle. (Reuters)"

In Yahoo! News: War with Iraq



US officer charged with murder in shooting of Iraqi: "A US officer was charged with murder and conspiracy to commit murder for his role in the shooting dead of a wounded Iraqi in a Baghdad slum, the US military said. (AFP)"

In Yahoo! News: War with Iraq



COVERAGE RUNDOWN 4 am in Katu.com: Iraq & Terror



Warplanes pound Fallujah as US death toll reaches 38: "Warplanes struck Fallujah as US-led forces hunted for diehard rebels after taking almost total control of the city in a week-long battle that killed 38 US soldiers and more than 1,200 insurgents. (AFP)"

In Yahoo! News: War with Iraq



Fallujah fight not yet over in Katu.com: Iraq & Terror



Iran vows to suspend uranium enrichment: "Moving to dispel suspicions it wants to build a nuclear bomb, Iran gave the United Nations a written promise that it will fully suspend uranium enrichment in exchange for incentives, diplomats and Iranian officials said."

In Seattle Post-Intelligencer: War on Iraq



US marines pound Falluja rebels: "US forces pound pockets of determined insurgents in the Iraqi city of Falluja in the second week of fighting there."

In BBC: Conflict with Iraq

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